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Metals Tycoon, Centricus Plan $10 Billion India M&A Push

Anil Agarwal is planning to invest $10 billion through a new partnership targeting government privatisations in India.

Metals Tycoon, Centricus Plan $10 Billion India M&A Push
Anil Agarwal, billionaire and owner of Vedanta Resources Plc, gestures while speaking during an interview. (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

Commodities tycoon Anil Agarwal is planning to invest $10 billion through a new partnership targeting government privatizations in India.

The billionaire is teaming up with London-based Centricus Asset Management Ltd. to seek investments in Indian companies offering substantial growth opportunities, according to a statement Thursday. They will look to turn around companies being sold off as part of the country’s 2.1 trillion-rupee ($29 billion) divestment program.

Metals Tycoon, Centricus Plan $10 Billion India M&A Push

Agarwal made a fortune buying state companies and fixing them up, building a metals and mining powerhouse under the umbrella of Vedanta Resources Ltd. He’s now seeking to repeat that success, betting he can spot gems among the dozens of companies being put on the block by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration.

The entrepreneurial dynamism in India “can be harnessed to unlock incredible transformation in the public sector,” Agarwal said in the statement. “We believe that this strategy can, and will, play a crucial role in the country’s ongoing industrialization.”

The billionaire plans to help former government companies accelerate their transformation into private-sector firms with professional management, according to the statement. Vedanta is among the parties that have expressed interest in acquiring India’s stake in $12 billion refiner Bharat Petroleum Corp.

Agarwal and Centricus have been seeking to raise capital from international investors to deploy in such turnaround opportunities, Bloomberg News first reported in September. They have been planning a fund with a 10-year life span that will use a private equity-type strategy, buying into companies and boosting their profitability before seeking an exit, a person with knowledge of the matter has said.

“India’s size means that its transformation should result in significant new capital sources for newly independent Indian companies which will support their development,” Dalinc Ariburnu, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partner who co-founded Centricus, said in the statement.

Centricus oversees $28 billion in assets, according to its website. The firm was started in 2016 by Ariburnu and Nizar Al-Bassam, a former investment banker at Deutsche Bank AG. Centricus advised SoftBank Group Corp. on the creation of its $100 billion Vision Fund and also worked on its $3.3 billion takeover of Fortress Investment Group LLC.

Agarwal, a 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. He now has a net worth of $2.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.