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CompaniesPriyamvada C
, Ranjani Raghavan
3 min
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20 Jan 2025, 10:04 AM
ISTBesides Multiples, India Quotient, Kae Capital, Westbridge Capital and Lightbox are looking to launch continuation fund. (Image: Pixabay
As the private equity firm’s fund cycle nears an end, a continuation fund would allow it to stay invested in successful companies while allowing its investors an exit option.
Bengaluru/Mumbai: Private equity firm Multiples is looking to launch a $300-400 million continuation fund to remain invested in three of its portfolio companies, three people familiar with the matter told Mint.
“The assets include Vastu Housing Finance, APAC Financial Services Pvt Ltd and Quantiphi,” one of the people cited above said. “The fund is expected to roll out in the coming month and the firm wants to continue backing some of these assets,” the person added.
Mint first reported on Multiples exploring a continuity vehicle in May last year.
Also Read: Why continuation funds are the new favourites in investor arsenals
Multiples, Vastu, APAC and Quantiphi did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The development comes as investors look to stay invested in successful portfolio companies even as their fund cycle nears an end to allow their backers, also called limited partners, an exit route. Such sophisticated vehicles have been on the rise among venture capital and private equity firms amid a broader liquidity crunch.
Besides Multiples, India Quotient, Kae Capital, Westbridge Capital and Lightbox are exploring similar structures, Mint reported earlier.
In July, Lightbox confirmed that it is considering a $100 million continuity vehicle to continue backing Rebel Foods, Zeno Health, PayMate and Furlenco, among others.
Also Read: VC firm Lightbox considers $100-million continuation fund to back mature startups
While this is more common in overseas markets, India is also seeing an uptick in continuity funds as investors look at exits.
In April, private equity firm ChrysCapital closed its largest ever continuation fund at $700 million, anchored by investors including HarbourVest Partners, LGT Capital Partners, and Pantheon Ventures. Samara Capital also raised a $150 million continuation fund in 2023 while Blume, an early-stage venture capital firm, raised a ₹200 crore fund.
Globally, notable examples include early-stage investment firm Antler’s $285-million fund, Investcorp’s $185-million fund, New York-based Hildred Capital Management’s $750-million fund, and Carlyle’s $2.2-billion fund.
While the primary exit avenue has proven to be an initial public offering, experts and industry executives expect that exits in India will be a mix of mergers and acquisitions and secondary transactions, which include continuation vehicles, going forward.
Also Read: Small investments surge as