Education sector investments profitable: Frost & Sullivan

9 Dec, 10
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Frost & Sullivan

According to Frost & Sullivan research, investments in Indian education sector are profitable making it lucrative to investors. This is the key finding of its report, Investment Opportunities in Indian Education Sector, which discovered that there have been close to 60 deals worth more than $640 million since 2006 in this sector. Out of these deals, there have been 21 deals amounting to $250 million in the first half of 2010 alone.

“Due to the innovative business models that have emerged in the education sector, investors can benefit from profits repatriated from subsidiaries,” notes Frost & Sullivan Financial Analyst Ramani Madusudanan. “Emergence of these working models, coupled with scalable and sustainable business opportunities, have attracted private equity (PE) firms to this sector.”
The increased interest of PE/VC in the education sector is because of high levels of profitability and freedom in pricing of services. In addition, stable cash flows unrelated to business cycles and low penetration of organized participants makes this an attractive market. “This sector is expected to be driven by the increasing propensity of the middle class to spend on education,” adds Madusudanan. “The low penetration levels of education in India and the absence of adequate infrastructure have led to significant opportunities for investment into this sector.” The value of most of the deals in the sector is in the range of $20 million. The participation of investors has so far been low due to regulatory barriers in the formal education segment.
The education sector in India can be divided into formal and non-formal segments. The formal segment refers to K-12 and higher education. Although this segment constitutes more than 80 percent of the market size, the opportunities to invest in this sector remain limited due to strict regulations that prevent the participants from distributing profits. The non-formal space is relatively small in size, but the low levels of regulations allow the participants to distribute profits.
“To facilitate PE investment in this sector, either regulations need to be relaxed or participants will have to adopt innovative models to distribute profits,” says Frost & Sullivan Business & Financial Services Director Kirti Timmanagoudar. “Even though there have been only 5 exits, the exits have given 7.2 times returns, making the sector a highly attractive option for investors.”
The deal size in the formal segment is higher than in the non-formal segment. The non-formal segment tends to be asset light in nature. It is not capital intensive and the operational leverage kicks in once the business achieves a considerable scale. The gestation period for such businesses is lower than those in the formal space. Investors in the formal segment (physical space) are expected to have a longer investment horizon of five to seven years to realize better valuation and higher exit multiples.
“Currently, given the scale of operations, the education sector can be of significant interest to growth stage VCs, who usually have a longer time frame,” concludes Madusudanan. “Once the startups achieve a considerable scale in 2-3 years, the segment will be attractive to PE investors.”

The education sector in India can be divided into formal and non-formal segments. The formal segment refers to K-12 and higher education. Although this segment constitutes more than 80 percent of the market size, the opportunities to invest in this sector remain limited due to strict regulations that prevent the participants from distributing profits. The non-formal space is relatively small in size, but the low levels of regulations allow the participants to distribute profits.

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  2. Mukesh Ambani set to announce Reliance forey into Education
  3. PE Investors bet on Education

Tags: Frost & Sullivan, Kirti Timmanagoudar, Ramani Madusudanan



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