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Private equity vs PPP
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Transcript of Private equity vs PPP
PRIVATE EQUITY VS PPP
V.Shiva Prakash
141576
What Is Private Equity
Private equity consists of investors and funds that make investments directly into private companies or conduct buyouts of public companies that result in a delisting of public equity.
Capital for private equity is raised from retail and institutional investors, and can be used to fund new technologies, expand working capital within an owned company, make acquisitions, or to strengthen a balance sheet.
Role And Objective Of private Equity
They help in growth of the Economy Helps the companies for expanding to
international markets Expertise to lead them on a new and
sustainable path. Greater expansion of business create
more employment.
#1 RJR Nabisco
Deal value in 1989: $31.1 billion
Inflation adjusted value: $55.38 billion
Buyers: KKR Still the biggest, badest and
most iconic private equity buyout of all time, KKR's staggeringly aggressive (and inevitably contentious) move on the tobacco and food titan can be fairly credited with giving rise to the leveraged buyout boom over the next twenty-odd years.
Top 10 Private Equity Firms In India
1.ICICI Venture 2.Chrys Capital3.Sequoia Capital4.India Value Fund5.Kotak Private Equity Group6.Baring Private Equity Partners7.Ascent Capital8.CX Partners9.Everstone Capital10.Blackstone Group
PPP
Introduction
It is also referred to as PPP or P3 or P .₃ PPP’s are used to provide both economic and
social infrastructure.
The ultimate goal of PPP is to obtain ‘value for money’.
Based on the concept that citizens are considered as client or customer.
OBJECTIVES OF PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
1. to ensure government services are delivered in the most economical, effective and efficient manner;
2. to create opportunities for private sector growth and to contribute to the overall economic development through the stimulation of competitiveness and initiative;
3. to ensure the best interests of the public, the business sector and the community are served through an appropriate allocation of risks and returns between partners.
Example 1:
Foreign investors can put in as much as Rs 90,300 crore (Rs 903 billion) in India’s rail infrastructure through the foreign direct investment (FDI) route, suggests a list of projects released by the railway ministry.
The Rs 63,000-crore (Rs 630 billion) Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed corridor project is the single largest. http://www.rediff.com/business/report/indian-railways-opens-up-rs-90000-cr-fdi-opportunity/20141212.htm
Example 2:
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