Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Koutons files DRHP with SEBI

The retail garment brand Koutons has filed its draft red herring prospectus, DRHP with SEBI and intends to enter the capital market with an IPO as reported on Moneycontrol.

This comes after a round of PE funding from Passport India, UTI Ventures & Argonaut. Passport India Investments (Mauritius) has picked up 6,00,000 equity shares in Koutons Retail India for an investment amount of Rs 210 million. Passport has been allotted the equity shares at a fixed price of Rs 350 per equity share. With this infusion Koutons Retail India has raised an aggregate amount of Rs 1,216 million as private equity since June 2006. The earlier investors were UTI Venture Funds Management Company Private Limited and Argonaut Ventures.

As on February 28, 2007, the company had 26 manufacturing and warehouse facilities in and around Gurgaon, and a network of 674 retail outlets across India.

Schroders looking to join the AMC brigade

Schroders Plc, a 204-year-old London fund manager, wants to open a mutual-fund business in India to tap demand for investments among the world’s second-most-populous nation, reported the Business Standard.

The company, London’s largest publicly traded fund manager, is considering either a joint venture or entering the market on its own.

Assets of the money manager overseen for clients outside the UK now account for 56 per cent of the total, up from 43 per cent five years ago. India’s mutual-fund market has about $73 billion of client assets, according to Boston-based Cerulli Associates.

The Indian AMC market has seen many new players establishing presence in the recent past. JP Morgan & AIG have launched their maiden India Equity Fund. Amongst the Indian names, Edelweiss has recently been awarded the AMC license. All of this is expected to further deepen the market and offer more choices to the Indian investor

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Jet to raise capital through PE route

India’s largest private airline Jet Airways is in negotiations with private equity players Blackstone, TPG Capital and Temasek for raising Rs 400-450 crore reported the Economic Times.

The company is raising money for meeting the operational expenses of running the loss-making Air Sahara, which it recently acquired. The operational expenses for Jet are huge since Air Sahara is not very profitable. Reportedly TPG Capital is looking to co-invest along with Singapore-based fund Temasek, while Blackstone is considering going solo.

The promoters currently hold 80% stake in the company which will come down proportionately along with the other shareholders’ stake. The private equity investor may take 8-9% stake.

Jet Airways recently acquired Lucknow-based Air Sahara in a deal valued at Rs 2,300 crore. While Jet had paid Rs 400 crore upfront, it will pay Rs 550 crore in four annual instalments, starting next year. Air Sahara will be renamed JetLite and will be a 100% subsidiary of Jet Airways.

Related Articles:
Jet Airways to buy Air Sahara for around Rs. 1450 crores
Jet Airways seeking $400 mn via private equity