Joint bid by Carlyle-Vangal for Cambridge takeover
Bangalore/New Delhi, Apr 10: A joint bid by private equity major Carlyle and serial entrepreneur Ramesh Vangal is set to snap up Cambridge Solutions, one of the largest listed BPO companies, pipping rival bidders like EDS, Apollo and HCL to the deal. Sources said Carlyle is expected to buy about 42 pc of the promoter stake that is on the block for about 0 million.
The acquisition will unveil the Carlyle Group's biggest investment in India till date. The PE major is joining hands with Mr Vangal, a co-founder and the largest individual shareholder in Cambridge with 18 pc stake, in effecting a buyout, sources added.
The joint bid would control around 60 pc stake valued at around 0 million in the acquired company, which carries an enterprise valuation of 0 million. This will make the transaction the second largest in the domestic BPO space after Oak Hill and General Atlantic took 60 pc stake in Genpact, valuing the former General Electric company at 0 million.
Sources said Carlyle's move to buy into Cambridge, which has substantial revenue locked up in the insurance processing domain, could unleash synergies given its rather large exposure to the insurance sector in the US. Mr Vangal could keep his equity holding intact and play a more proactive role. Mr Vangal, however, is not likely to return to the operational structure, which he quit last year reportedly over differences with the existing promoters.
The deal could be unveiled in the next few weeks after the formalities are completed. Cambridge Solutions declined comment. The promoters exiting Cambridge Solutions (formerly Scandent Solutions) include ex-McKinsey honcho Rajat Gupta, former Pepsico chairman Chris Sinclair, US-Canadian Bronfman family of Seagram fame and the Chanderia family.
Earlier
this
year,
the
promoters
had
mandated
Lehman
Brothers
to
find
a
suitor
for
their
holding.
It
is
learnt
that
the
bulk
of
the
59.15
pc
promoter
holding,
including
that
of
Mr
Vangal,
is
jointly
held
in
a
Mauritius
entity
which
is
being
unbundled.
Almost two-thirds of Cambridge's Rs 1,200-crore revenue comes from high-end BPO operations spread across the US, India and Europe. It has a strong presence in the lucrative insurance processing domain, with around 2,000 of its total 4,500 employees located in the US.
Mr Vangal, along with Rajat Gupta and others, set up Scandent Solutions, a broad-based IT services company, more than five years back. Scandent bought Cambridge Integrated Services, a global outsourcing firm and part of US-based Aon Corporation, for 5 million in 2004. One year later, Scandent Solutions merged with Cambridge Services to form Cambridge Solutions.
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