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With 40 Deals Accounting For $1,558 Mn, Private Equity & VC Exits Revive In Q3

With 40 Deals Accounting For $1,558 Mn, Private Equity & VC Exits Revive In Q3

SUMMARY

Private equity and venture capital (VC) exits touched 40 In Q3 2020

The deal amount dropped by 58% compared to 2019’s $3,762 Mn in the same quarter

Indian startups raised $5.2 Bn across 389 funding deals in the first half of the 2020

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After a brief slump in the second quarter of 2020, the number of private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) exits have reached back to 40 in the third quarter between July-September quarter. These 40 deals were accounted for at $1,558 Mn, a 38.5% drop compared to Q1’s exit deals worth $2,532 Mn.

The third quarter of 2019 had witnessed 49 private equity and venture capital exits amounting to $3,762 Mn, which is 58% more than the deal worth in Q3 of 2020. The number of venture capitalist exits had also jumped back to 16 in Q3, after dropping to nine in the second quarter. These deals accounted for $299 Mn, translating to a 33% drop from Q1 of 2020 and 84% fall since Q3 of 2019 that had 22 such deals.

Some of the biggest exits in the third quarter have been Carlyle’s exit from SBI Cards & Payment Services, Blackstone’s exit from Essel Propack, Capital International’s exit from Intas Pharmaceuticals, and IFC and ChrysCapital’s exit from AU Small Finance Bank, according to the data shared by Venture Intelligence with Hindu BusinessLine.

WhiteHat Jr’s acquisition has also made it to the list as it offered exits to Nexus Venture Partner, Omidyar Network, and Owl Ventures. The world’s most valuable edtech company BYJU’S had acquired WhiteHat Jr for $300 Mn in August. The company had raised $11 Mn from investors and has a revenue run rate of $150 Mn.

Exits are a way to give some liquidity to early-stage investors, founders and employees who own a stake in the company. The private equity and venture capitalist exits are usually done through open market transactions, sale of secondary shares, and mergers and acquisitions (M&As).

M&As include deals such as buyback, strategic sale and secondary sale purchases. Of the above mentioned five deals, three were open market exits.

Indian Startup Funding Deterred In 2020

According to Inc42 Plus’ report, Indian startups raised $5.2 Bn across 389 funding deals in the first half of 2020. The total capital inflow declined by 29% compared to H2 2019 clubbed with all three major stages of funding growth stage, late-stage and seed-stage witnessing a negative growth of -52%, -21% and -3% respectively.

The growth stage funding amount plunged by nearly half from $2.1 Bn in H2 2019 to $1.02 Bn in H1 2020. Whereas the late-stage funding dipped from $144 Mn in H2 2019 to $140 Mn in H1 2020. Despite the shortfall of funding, fintech, edtech, consumer services, enterprise tech and healthtech have turned out to be investors’ favorite spots to deal in.

Deals struck by companies like OYO ($806 Mn), RenNew Power ($450 Mn), FirstCry ($296 Mn) and others have boosted the aggregate value of the total funding in H1 2020. Removing such outliers (i.e. $200 Mn and above rounds) the total value of funding in H1 2020 stood at $3.2 Bn.

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