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Blackstone, the world’s largest alternative asset manager, will double employee headcount in its private-equity business in Singapore within the next two years, a top executive said, as it looks to tap into a growing number of deals in Southeast Asia.
The expansion in Singapore will also bring the asset manager closer to its investor base, which includes sovereign wealth funds, family offices and individual investors, said Amit Dixit, Blackstone’s Asia private equity (PE) business head.
Blackstone’s Singapore PE team will grow to six or seven people within two years, and Aravind Krishnan, a managing director in its PE practice, will move to the city state from Mumbai to lead that team, Dixit said.
Blackstone joins a growing of list of global asset managers expanding or setting up offices in Singapore as financial investors seek alternative bases to China amid growing geopolitical tensions and a sluggish economic recovery there.
“Domiciling businesses in Singapore has really accelerated post-Covid,” he said. “So even if the business may be in India, China, Korea or even a global business, they will have headquarters in Singapore.”
Blackstone, which manages over US$1 trillion in assets including real estate, favours businesses with global presence and sees opportunities to invest, build and grow such businesses in Southeast Asia.
The New York-based fund manager will focus on sectors including technology, healthcare, consumer, financial services and value-added industrial, and will look at deal sizes as small as US$150 million, Dixit said.
Blackstone has been operating in the city state for over a decade and employs more than 100 professionals, he said.
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It is one of the largest PE players in Asia, having raised US$11 billion for its second Asia private-equity fund in 2021, nearly tripling its predecessor.
Dixit said about 50 per cent of the second fund has been deployed so far, and when around 75 per cent has been committed, Blackstone will start fundraising for a third Asia private-equity fund.
Some of its Asia deals in recent years include acquiring Singaporean precision components maker Interplex for US$1.6 billion in 2022 and selling IBS Software Services for US$450 million to rival buyout firm Apax Partners last year, according to Dealogic data.
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