India As A Career Move (Spring 2011 Update)

Author: Shyam Kamadolli
Published: May 11, 2011 at 6:16 pm
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This is the latest in a series of posts related to career options developing in India which I started putting together for business school students and professionals seeking my advice.  Most interesting developments to report on are in venture capital, private equity, investment banking, and entrepreneurship.  The previous edition is here for those who missed it.

Venture Capital / Private Equity / Growth Equity

rupee symbolThe Indian PE/VC scene is thriving as evidenced by the Ernst & Young round-up for the most recent quarter. All the fund raising of the past year has now led to a number of funds stepping up hiring at the junior levels but there continues to be an exodus of professionals at mid-to-senior levels.  As I reported recently, limited partners are very concerned about this churn and although hiring has picked up we are in a period of transition for the industry.

Before you dial the recruiters, you must consider a perceptible change in how teams are being built in India now.   Funds are now reportedly a lot less excited about candidates that do not already have several years of experience in India, a substantial deal sheet and the most important shift (especially at the senior most levels) is an expectation of exits. 

In my opinion, the sector has become less attractive: even if you do break into this business, as valuations reach stratospheric levels, it has become harder for investment professionals to do good deals and generate returns for investors (and hence for themselves).

Investment Banking

Investment bankers have thrived as India Inc. continues to raise money from private and public markets and buy assets overseas.  They also serve foreign firms that are hunting for a toehold in the growing Indian market.    Hundreds of intermediary firms and investment banks have sprung up over the past few years and this robust marketplace has a broad spectrum of them:

  • Local equity capital market bulwarks (Edelweiss, Motilal Oswal and JM Financial)
  • Local upstarts (Avendus, Equirus, Centrum, etc.)
  • Advisory arms of Indian banks (Kotak, ICICI, Yes Bank , etc.)
  • Global bulge bracket firms (Credit Suisse, JP Morgan, etc.)
  • Advisory arms of accounting firms (Ernst & Young, PWC, Deloitte and Grant Thornton)
  • Prolific free-lancers who are deeply entrenched in local entrepreneur networks

Continued on the next page
 
 

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Article Author: Shyam Kamadolli

I recently moved to India to work with a private equity fund which provides growth capital to companies across sectors. Previously, I was with a Boston based venture capital fund. Over the years I have focused on technology, media and telecom businesses. …

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