• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Reuters Showcase

Deal or No Deal

Deal or No Deal

Yahoo-Alibaba talks at an impasse - sources.  Full Article 

Tata Motors Results

Tata Motors Results

Tata Motors Q3 net jumps 40.5 pct.  Full Article 

Unitech Results

Unitech Results

Unitech hit by fall in demand for houses.  Full Article 

iPad Trouble

iPad Trouble

Apple may face iPad export ban in China trademark row.  Full Article | Related Story 

Under Scrutiny

Under Scrutiny

India probes Google, Yahoo for possible forex violation.  Full Article 

No Censorship?

No Censorship?

India will never censor social media - Sibal.  Full Article 

Singapore Airshow

Singapore Airshow

Asia's biggest arms, aerospace event begins under China shadow.  Full Article 

India's Reliance Industries KG-D6's facility located in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh is pictured in this undated handout photo. India's Reliance Industries Ltd resumed crude oil production from its east coast MA-1 field on March 8 following an emergency shutdown in December, Upstream Regulator V.K. Sibal said on March 12, 2009. REUTERS/Reliance Industries/Handout (INDIA ENERGY BUSINESS IMAGE OF THE DAY TOP PICTURE) FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS

RIL's Output Woes

Reliance Industries' D6 output may fall to 27 mscmd - source.  Full Article 

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Stock recommendations from VantageTrade.  Full Coverage 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Norwest picks up less than 5% stake in OnMobile from open market

Related Topics

Tue Mar 17, 2009 3:45pm IST

Venture capital firm Norwest is evaluating more opportunities in the listed space across sectors.

Venture capital firm Norwest Venture Partners has picked a stake of less than 5% in India's largest mobile value added services firm OnMobile. The stake has been acquired through open market block deals, Norwest Managing Director Sohil Chand told VCCircle. The stake could

have been bought for for anywhere between Rs 65-80 crore as per the stock price of OnMobile.

Norwest hired Chand from Goldman Sachs late last year to focus on growth capital, PIPEs, and late stage investing in the country. "We will definitely look more heavily at growth equity opportunities in a variety of sectors," said Promod Haque, Managing Partner at Norwest, in an interview to VCCircle earlier this year.

OnMobile, in which Infosys has a stake, was founded in 2000 by former private equity executive Arvind Rao and was listed in early 2008. The company also has several acquisitions under its belt. It has raised several rounds of funding from investors which include Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and Polygon Investment Partners.

With stock markets hitting their lows with global meltdown, investors can look at value picks in the market. Many private equity and venture capital investors are actively looking to acquire stakes in public companies through the open market route.

"We look at both private and public companies available and take a call on the one that has valuation which is more compelling," said Chand. Also valuations in public space seem to be more attractive as compared to private space right now.

Norwest is looking at more opportunities in the listed space in a number of sectors. It is looking at bigger companies who are leaders in their space. "My philosophy is to take smaller stakes in bigger companies," adds Chand.

-- Copyright 2008 VCCircle.com. All rights reserved.

This content/article is provided by Mosaic Media Ventures Private Limited and not by Reuters. All rights, including copyright, in this content/article provided by VCCircle.com are owned or controlled by Mosaic Media Ventures Private Limited. The content may not be copied, broadcast, downloaded and stored (in any medium), transmitted, adapted or changed in any way whatsoever without the prior written permission of Mosaic Media Ventures Private Limited

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.