Baring Vostok Capital Partners
Baring Vostok Capital Partners is the largest independent private equity firm focused on investments in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States. The Baring Vostok Private Equity Funds invest across a broad range of industries including oil and gas, consumer products, media and technology, telecommunications and financial services.
Private ownership | |
Industry | Private equity |
Founded | 1994 |
Founder | Michael Calvey |
Headquarters | Moscow, Russia |
Products | Leveraged buyouts, Growth capital |
Total assets | $3.7 billion[1] |
Website | www.baring-vostok.com |
The Investment Advisor of the Funds, Baring Vostok Capital Partners (Guernsey) several times since 2005 has been voted “Russian Private Equity Firm of the Year” by the readers of Private Equity International and Private Equity Online. The sub-advisor of BVCP has a branch office in Moscow with a team of 40 experienced investment professionals.[2]
From its founding in 1994 through 2004, the firm was a subsidiary of Baring Private Equity International (BPEP International) which was an affiliate of Barings Bank. In addition to Baring Vostok, the affiliates of BPEP International include Baring Private Equity Asia[3] as well as Baring Private Equity Partners India, founded in 1984.[4] BPEP International's Latin America affiliate is known as GP Investments, a leading private equity firm in Brazil. Collectively, the firms represent over $12 billion in capital commitments as of the end of 2014.
With offices in Moscow, the firm has raised over $3.7 billion across five investment funds. The firm’s name vostok is the Russian word for "east". Additionally, the Vostok spacecraft was the first manned spacecraft, operated by Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.
The firms founder Michael Calvey and five colleagues were arrested in February 2019 for allegedly defrauding Russian businessman Artem Avetisyan who is an associate of Putin and the FSB. Calvey maintains the charges are baseless, supported by a BBC investigation, and says the real reason for the arrest is Calvey was suing Avetisyan in a separate case in London, and winning, and Avetisyan used his connections with the FSB to have Calvey arrested in Russia. Avetisyan stands to gain 10s of millions if Calvey is convicted, and Calvey faces 10 years in the notorious Matrosskaya Tishina where Sergei Magnitsky mysteriously died.[5]
Investments
Since inception, Baring Vostok has invested over $2.4 billion in 67 companies.[2]
Baring Vostok founded by Michael Calvey is best known for its early stage investment in Russian search engine, Yandex, acquiring a 35.7% stake in the business in 2000.[6][7] At the time of the Yandex IPO, Baring Vostok is estimated to have generated value of approximately $4 billion, representing a return on its original $5 million investment in excess of 800x.[8][9] Among Baring Vostok's other investments are Volga Gas,[10] Borjomi Mineral Water, Ozon.ru, Burren Energy, CTC Media, Centre of Financial Technologies, Enforta, ER-Telecom, 1C, Burren Energy, Novomet, Kaspi Bank, Orient Express Bank, Europlan, Novomet, Karo, Avito.ru, Tinkoff.ru, EMC and Golden Telecom,[6], Verticali.
History
Baring Vostok Capital Partners origins date back to 1994 with the formation of the First NIS Regional Fund.[11] The fund was a joint venture between Baring Asset Management and Sovlink, a Russian-American merchant bank. Baring Bank’s ties to Russia traced back several centuries and Barings was the primary international bank for the Russian czars.
The First NIS Regional Fund was originally managed by a team of investment professionals from Barings and Sovlink including current Baring Vostok senior partner Michael Calvey. With $160 million of investor commitments, the fund ultimately returned $620 million to investors over the life of the fund. In 1997, Baring Vostok Capital Partners, became an affiliate of Baring’s BPEP International. Following the collapse of Barings Bank, the ownership of BPEP International was assumed by the Dutch bank ING Group.
In 2001, the firm completed fundraising for the Baring Vostok Private Equity Fund. With $205 million of investor commitments, Baring Vostok’s was the first foreign private equity fund raised in the aftermath of the 1998 Russian financial crisis.[12]
In May 2004, BPEP International completed a management buyout from ING Group, which resulted in Baring Vostok's partners purchasing ownership of its management company. At the same time, the firm's affiliates in Asia, India and Latin America completed similar buyouts of their respective firms. These companies subsequently continued their affiliation although each firm retained full ownership of their respective businesses.[13] Following the buyout of the management company, in 2005, the Baring Vostok Private Equity Fund III was raised with total committed capital of $413 million.[14]
In February 2007, the firm completed fundraising for its fourth private equity fund. Baring Vostok raised $1.1 billion of investor commitments for its main fund Baring Vostok Private Equity Fund IV. Together with a parallel fund, Baring Vostok Fund IV Supplemental Fund, which raised over $300 million of capital, Baring Vostok's fourth fund was at the time the largest private equity fund in Eastern Europe.[15]
In October 2012, the Baring Vostok Private Equity Fund LP V was raised with total committed capital of $1.15 billion, which was, at the time, the largest amount raised for a deal of this kind in Russia.[16] Baring Vostok Fund V Supplemental Fund raised $350 million.[17]
On 2 September 2019, the Commercial Court of the Amur Region, Russia, ordered the seizure of the 41.6% share of equity in Vostochny Bank controlled by Baring Vostok. The seizure was requested by Vostochny and, according to the court, it was necessary to prevent Baring Vostok selling shares in Vostochny before a court decision was reached in continuing litigation over alleged embezzlement by Baring Vostok executives.[18][19]
References
- Capital raised since inception
- Baring Vostok Wins Best Private Equity Firm In Russia Archived April 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Private Equity Russia, 2010
- Baring Private Equity Asia
- Baring Private Equity Partners India Archived November 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (company website)
- Amy Knight (March 4, 2019). "The Price of Doing Business in Russia: Prison". New York Review of Books. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
- Russian roots. ANATOMY, May 2007
- Baring Vostok-backed Yandex files for IPO Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. AltAssets, May 3, 2011
- Yandex Is Set for $1.3 Billion Stock Offering. New York Times, May 23, 2011
- Yandex Beats Google Archived 2011-11-05 at the Wayback Machine. PrivCap, May 24, 2011
- Volga Gas plans to raise about 100 mln usd in London IPO. Forbes, April 10, 2007
- Baring Vostok scales new private equity heights. Euromoney magazine, May 2007
- Baring Vostok Private Equity Fund closes at $205m Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. AltAssets, Jan 24, 2002
- Baring Private Equity Group (organization website)
- Russian Baring Vostok closes third fund on $400m Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine. AltAssets, Feb 25, 2005
- Baring Vostock set to launch record fund in bear market. Dow Jones Financial News, July 18, 2011
- Chassany, Anne-Sylvaine. "Baring Vostok Gets $1.5 Billion for Russia’s Largest Fund", Bloomberg, 1 October 2012. Accessed 18 February 2016.
- "Russian court orders seizure of stake in bank in dispute with Baring Vostok". Reuters. 2 September 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
- "Russian court sizes Baring Vostok's share in Vostochny bank in $155 mln damages case". RAPSI Russian Legal Information Agency. 2 September 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
External links
- Baring Vostok Capital Partners (company website)