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Year Archive
View Article  Venture investments defy gravity
If dismal quarterly results and hammered stocks are painting a bleak picture of the tech sector, here is the proverbial silver lining. Venture capitalists (VCs) are surprisingly upbeat. Last week alone, five companies in India have raised funds from VCs like Intel Capital, SAP Ventures, Canaan Partners, Helion Venture Partners and SVB India Capital Partners (venture fund affiliate of Silicon Valley Bank). “There is a lot of money chasing good technology stories,” according to the promoters of companies like iYogi and United Lex who have just raised money. While iYogi raised $9.5 million in Series B financing from SAP Ventures, Canaan Partners and SVB India Capital Partners; United Lex raised $6 million. And so far data bears that out. In an otherwise tough economic environment, VC investments in the first half of 2008 are broadly at par with the numbers last year. In the six months to June, VC firms invested $340 million in 51 deals compared with $363 million in 55 deals in the same period last year, according to VC tracking firm, Venture Intelligence. Other investors, however, have not been able to weather the slowdown. Private equity (PE) deals, for one, have shrunk to almost half in the first half of 2008. The total value of deals announced in the first half of 2008 was $760.17 million against $1.47 billion during the first half of 2007 respectively.   more »
View Article  PE funds focus on realty, infra
Sectors with cheap valuations are on the radar of most private equity funds, most of whom are flush with funds. Owing to the market slowdown in the first half of the year, most PE funds did not deploy cash. Deals clinched in the last few weeks indicate that PE funds are targeting real estate, education and infrastructure companies. Recently, Bahrain’s TAIB Bank acquired a 26 per cent stake in Anant Raj Industries. Lightspeed Ventures and Sequoia Capital invested $18 million (Rs 76.3 crore) in Tutorvista.com, followed by JP Morgan, which has picked up a 33 per cent stake in Alok Infrastructure’s Special Purpose Vehicle. “Real estate, as a sector, has corrected a lot and probably we could see some more correction but there is no dearth of demand. Price has now become attractive for some of the good companies in the sector. One will see lots of deals going forward,” said the country head of an international PE fund. The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Realty Index has crashed more than 60 per cent this year from its peak of 13,848 as on January 8, 2008. Promoters too, as the PE funds say, are coming to terms with the reality. The lag effect is showing and the PE funds have realised that they cannot make aggressive projections way ahead of fundamentals.   more »
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