Vedanta’s Anil Agarwal seeks $5 billion for turnaround fund to invest in PSUs
Economy

Vedanta’s Anil Agarwal seeks $5 billion for turnaround fund to invest in PSUs

Anil Agarwal plans to buy companies over a five-year period and then boost their profitability before seeking an exit.

   
Anil Agarwal |Photographer: Halden Krog | Bloomberg

File photo of Anil Agarwal | Halden Krog | Bloomberg

Mumbai: Commodities tycoon Anil Agarwal is seeking at least $5 billion for a fund targeting companies being sold off by the Indian government, marking a return to the strategy that made him wealthy.

Agarwal is targeting $1 billion or more in an initial round of fundraising for the proposed India Direct Investment fund, according to people familiar with the matter, asking not to be identified because the plans are private. He is already scouting for targets and could spend nearly $10 billion on the first few acquisitions, one of the people said.

The billionaire is working with London-based Centricus Asset Management Ltd. on the fund, which will have a 10-year life span and use a private equity-type strategy, according to another person. He plans to buy companies over a five-year period and then boost their profitability before seeking an exit, the person said.

Agarwal, the founder of Vedanta Resources Ltd., is raising capital from international investors to buy stakes in government companies being sold under India’s 2.1 trillion-rupee ($28 billion) divestment program, Bloomberg News reported this month. The fund will also target companies being restructured under the country’s bankruptcy rules.

A representative for Centricus declined to comment, while a spokesperson for Vedanta didn’t immediately respond to emailed queries.

Agarwal has a net worth of $2.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The former metals trader built his business through a series of ambitious acquisitions over the past few decades, including a 2001 deal to take control of government-owned Bharat Aluminium Co. in one of the first tests of India’s efforts to offload state holdings. – Bloomberg


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