Private equity activity in May in India reported the weakest performance this year so far with deal volumes dropping by nearly a fourth and 39 per cent fall in volumes from April, while the average deal size fell by a fifth, according to Grant Thornton Bharat.
A total of 107 deals were transacted in May with a value of $1.8 billion and the average was at $17.2 million, down from $21.5 million in April.
Subdued PE activity dragged down overall deal activity in India, including mergers and acquisitions and fund raising, as markets remained volatile in the background of dynamic, evolving geo-political developments and uncertainty over global trade tariffs.
According to GT, the month under review saw 179 deals with a total value of $4.5 billion, “the lowest monthly tally in volume and value terms so far this year.”
Mergers and acquisitions saw a 75 per cent rise in deal value from April, due to one single deal of over $1 billion, though volumes saw a 1 per cent dip.
Fund raising via and qualified institutional placement was also muted with only two IPOs raising $300 million.
Deal momentum is expected to pick up in the second half of the current fiscal year, in the backdrop of a rejuvenated IPO market, said Shanthi Vijetha, Partner, Growth at Grant Thornton Bharat.
PE activity
The subdued PE deals notwithstanding, two new unicorns made their appearance — Drools Pet Foods and JSW One Platforms.
The top PE deal during the month was that of General Catalyst investing $218 million in PB Healthcare.
Venture capital dominated deal volumes, particularly in retail and consumer, technology, banking and financial services, with strong early-stage activity across 24 seed and 10 pre-Series A rounds, the report said.
The market continues to reflect consistent activity levels, albeit with a tilt toward smaller deal sizes, a trend that has defined investor behaviour so far this year, GT said.
M&As
One of the biggest deals during the month was that of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation buying a 20 per cent stake in YES Bank for $1.6 billion, and it accounted for 66 per cent of total deal value.
Outbound M&A activity saw a sharp rise, with 15 deals closed versus just two in April, “signalling renewed confidence among Indian corporates to pursue cross-border growth and integration after nearly a decade,” said the report
Fund raising
There were just two issuances during May raising $2.9 million, a 60 per cent decline from April.
“The overall softness reflects cautious investor sentiment amid ongoing market uncertainties,” GT said.