Carlyle set to close new Asia fund at $6.5 billion - sources

Reuters  |  HONG KONG 

By and Kane Wu

The giant had initially targeted a fund of $5 billion but raised its expectations following a strong response from its investors, known as limited partners, said the people. The fundraising could be completed as early as this month-end, one of them said, although a separate source said the timing of the close could change.

Investor interest in Asia-focused has grown as deals have increased in size following corporate restructuring and as global private equity funds make headway in key markets, including China, and

Last year Carlyle's rival led the region's biggest ever-buyout with the $18 billion purchase of Toshiba Corp's chips unit.

Carlyle's latest fund will combine buyout and growth opportunities, one of the people said, with the bulk going to buyouts. The firm merged its buyout and growth teams in 2017.

Separately, the U.S. private equity fund has also kicked off a process to raise a Chinese yuan fund of 4 billion ($629 million) that would target opportunities in the world's second-largest economy, one of the people told

Carlyle declined to comment. The sources declined to be named as the information is private.

The two funds of Carlyle add to fundraising momentum in a region that has become a key battleground for global financial sponsors.

A total of 342 funds raised a combined $107 billion in last year, according to data provider

Other global groups that have recently raised fresh capital include KKR & Co, which closed a new Asia-focused buyout fund in June last year after raising $9.3 billion, a record for the region.

Bain is also targeting up to $4 billion for a new Asia-focused fund.

Carlyle's existing portfolio firms in Asia range from a stake in Chinese Tencent's unit Literature to Metropolis Healthcare, an India-based global operator of pathology laboratories.

Last month, it agreed to invest, along with Management and others, $1.9 billion to buy a majority stake in the financial services business of Chinese

The Washington, D.C.-based firm generated an 18 percent net internal rate of return in its last $3.9 billion Asia fund by the end of March, according to its first quarter earnings report.

(Reporting by and Kane Wu; Editing by and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, May 07 2018. 14:39 IST