Bangalore: Wipro's investment firm has been operating since 2006, funded around 40 publicly listed and private companies out of a corpus of $1 billion (Rs4,290 crore), reported Livemint. Yet, its operations are shrouded in secrecy and the firm has consciously avoided building a public profile.
Wipro's chairman routes all his non-Wipro investments through Premji Invest (PI). Premji, who had a 79.45 percent stake in Wipro on 31 March has, through PI, invested in several listed firms such as ABG Shipyard, Dish TV India, JM Financial, Marico, Shoppers Stop, Koutons and Today's Writing Products. PI has also invested in private firms such as HealthCare Global Enterprises.
PI's investment focus is broader. The company invests in listed firms and debt but it also sees itself as a venture capital and private equity firm that makes both early stage and late-stage investments.
PI seeks to play in them providing guidance to companies and managements to create a scalable business and helping them build systems and processes, and finally, execute their plans.
PI has autonomy to pick its investments. Although Premji does contribute to investment decisions, but "not on an everyday basis". PI's Chief Investment Officer Prakash Parthasarathy adds, makes small and large investments, is sector-agnostic, looks for opportunities in sectors where Wipro is not present, and makes the final investment decision on the basis of the market opportunity and the management team of the company being evaluated for an investment.
Over the past few months, PI has invested in companies in sectors such as textiles, healthcare, and hospitality. "We will not invest in IT services, to avoid conflict of interests," says Parthasarathy. And PI finds sectors such as financial services, consumer care and industrial products attractive
Write a comment now!
siliconindia news bureau
Today’s top news
Drinking this festive season? Call a cab home
'If you find this hard to read - book a cab!' - many restaurants and bars here will put up such signboards this festive season, urging customers to take a cab instead of ...
Environment, philosophy, romance: 13-year-old author brims with ideas
Debutante novelist Asmita Goyanka drew a parallel of global warming threatening to destroy the earth with the villain in her novel.
Avoid inappropriate comments, match referee tells Indians, Australians
International Cricket Council (ICC) match referee Chris Broad has spoken to representatives of both the Indian and Australian teams and advised them to avoid making inapp...
Offbeat sculptor Prithpal Singh Ladi returns to Delhi
Contemporary sculptor Prithpal Singh Ladi, who has created waves with his futuristic stone monuments, steel dragonflies and frog torsos, is coming to the capital with his...
Curry meal plot spiced up British bank bailout
British finance minister Alistair Darling and his team steeled themselves with a meal of spicy Indian dishes as they prepared for difficult night-long negotiations on the...
Cheaper smuggled cigarettes killing more people than drugs
Tobacco smuggling causes around 4,000 premature deaths a year or four times the number of fatalities caused by the use of all smuggled illegal drugs put together, but the...
Kareena Kapoor to launch her own website
Joining the league of international stars like Victoria Beckham, Madonna and Jennifer Lopez, Bollywood actress Kareena Kapoor is all set to launch her own website.
Dutchman Guido returns career-best card
The star of the second day in Indian Open golf is Guido Van Der Valk with a superb 61 to be tied sixth and he says he likes to play on the Asian Tour.
Bollywood stays complacent despite liquidity crunch
Could the current global market meltdown, directly or indirectly, affect Bollywood's finances and the production of its hugely mounted movies?
Hundred in India is special for Australians: Hussey
After his maiden Test hundred in India, Michael Hussey said it is a matter of pride for any Australian to score century here as the conditions are so challenging.

