PE major EQT sets $14.5b hard cap for ninth Asia buyout fundIt earlier set the target fund size at $12.5b.

Swedish investment house EQT Group has set a hard cap of $14.5 billion for its ninth Asia buyout fund, BPEA Private Equity Fund IX (BPEA IX), according to an announcement.

The actual fund size is dependent on the outcome of the fundraising process, EQT said. It earlier set the target fund size at $12.5 billion. The predecessor fund, BPEA VIII, had raised over $11 billion in 2022.

In January 2024, i.e. a year after the merger of EQT and BPEA, the Asia private equity business of the combined entity rebranded as EQT Private Capital Asia.

BPEA IX will likely continue the firm’s active ownership strategy to make control-oriented investments across the Asia-Pacific, focusing on healthcare, technology services, business services, education, financial services, consumer and advanced manufacturing.

Christian Sinding, CEO of EQT, earlier said that now “is a reasonably good time” to raise the firm’s next flagship vehicles, including its Asia fund. He opined that there was just a cyclical element in the industry where “drawdowns exceed distributions”, but he believes this adjustment period will soon be over, given the exit activity going on in the market.

“Internally, we remain laser-focused on exits and performance. We have a large number of exit processes ongoing and in preparation,” said Sinding.

However, Segerberg foresaw that extensions in fundraising will continue to happen. He added that EQT expected its flagship fundraising cycle to be around 3-3.5 years. That allowed the firm to balance between investing in a well-diversified portfolio and having time to realise earlier funds and generate liquidity for clients, he said.

Some of EQT’s Southeast Asia portfolio, including from the BPEA business that it acquired in 2022, are Indonesian natural ingredients provider Indesso; Singapore-based healthcare platform MHC Asia and video game development firm Virtuos; and integrated retail platform The CrownX, and education companies VUS and ILA in Vietnam.

Go to Source