Record fund inflows through private equity and venture capital funds, primarily into the start-up ecosystem, have propelled the overall inflows to USD 5.8 billion in February, which is double the amounts annualised, according to industry data.
According to the monthly data tabulated by the IVCA-EY (Indian Venture and Alternate Capital Association), PE/VC fund inflows in February jumped to USD 5.8 billion, 2.3 times more than what was seen in February 2021 at USD 2.5 billion.
Deal volume grew 33 per cent to 117 deals but this is four per cent lower than January when it stood at 122 deals.
As much as 88 per cent of the total PE/VC investments in February were pure-play investments, excluding real estate and infrastructure sectors, compared with 79 per cent last February.
The deal space was led by 17 large deals worth USD 4.4 billion and 24 per cent on a monthly basis. Nearly half of the total investments, or USD 2.5 billion, flew into start-ups, making it the highest in terms of value in the month, across 85 deals.
While buyouts saw USD 1.5 billion across seven deals during the month, exits stood at USD 1.4 billion across 10 deals, including three secondary exits worth USD 1.2 billion, according to the report.
February inflows of USD 5.8 billion from PE/VC are more than double the investments a year ago and 24 per cent higher than the previous month. Pure-play PE/VC investments, excluding infrastructure and realty, and start-ups continued to dominate the investment landscape accounting for 88 per cent and 44 per cent of the total inflows in value terms, respectively. February 2021 saw 61 deals netting USD 1.1 billion.
Start-ups got as much as 44 per cent of all PE/VC investments in the reporting month.
PE/VC exits recorded USD 1.4 billion across 10 deals, primarily driven by secondary deals, which include the USD 800-million exit from IGT Solutions by Aion.
As the volatility in the mid-cap and small-cap indices continued in the month, there was only one PE-backed IPO and it is expected that the number of PE-backed IPOs will be lower in 2022 given the volatility, rise in uncertainty and waning investor interest in the primary markets, according to the report.
While the technology sector continued to receive maximum investments in 2022, there has been a significant rise in investments into the fintech segment led by the emerging decentralised finance space.
Fintech investments have grown at an annualised rate of 125 per cent over the past five years, primarily driven by investments into the payments ecosystem with neo-banking and decentralised finance spaces recording 20 times growth.
The month saw 17 deals greater than or equal to USD 100 million aggregating to USD 4.4 billion, compared with USD 1.6 billion across 10 deals in February 2021 and 14 deals worth USD 3 billion in January.
The largest deal was Baring PE Asia buying IGT Solutions from Aion for over USD 800 million.
The month saw a total fundraise of USD 347 million across four funds compared with USD 380 million in February 2021 by one fund. The largest fundraising was by Trifecta worth USD 199 million to invest in IPO-ready new-age businesses.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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