Third, there is an opportunity to, potentially, make acquisitions or be more aggressive in gaining market share. We have an acquisition conversation going on in every one of our companies or, in some companies, multiple acquisition conversations. We think it’s a very good environment for talking acquisitions and playing offense to increase market share.
In terms of new investments, we are navigating the environment with patience and dialing up on quality. As a US dollar investor, the world does look a lot cheaper. In most markets, keeping India aside, investors are now trading at a discount to the ten-year averages of the long-term market. We want to dial up on the quality, and quality is always expensive. It won’t be cheap, but it’s cheaper than it used to be 12 months back.
That’s where being a builder comes in, because whatever you are buying will be relatively expensive in somebody’s eyes unless you have a differentiated point of view on what you build, not what you’re buying. In our investment committee approval meeting , we have that value creation plan—what we call the business building plan—up front. Many years back, those plans would come into place six months after the investment or even a year after. Now, they come six months before the investment. As soon as an investment closes, you hit the ground running.
McKinsey: As someone who works closely with family businesses and entrepreneurs in India, what advice would you have for families seeking to partner with private equity firms and build high-performing organizations?
Amit Dixit: We have, over the last 15 years, partnered with many family-owned businesses. It’s important to have the business governance ready. Good governance is good business. What do I mean by that? Have a well-reputed accounting firm do your audits, have a diversified board, have the right people, have proper financial controls in place, and put an ERP [enterprise resource planning] system in place. For any kind of activity you want to do—whether it’s an IPO or private equity—it’s just good governance. Even growing your own business is very hard to do if you don’t have this basic infrastructure in place.
Second, what has contributed to Blackstone’s success is what is going to contribute, and is contributing, to the success of family-owned businesses: attract, retain, and incentivize best-in-class management. I cannot emphasize how much of a difference a great manager versus a good manager can make. It’s a very big point, but for great managers to succeed, you have to give them the operating freedom, the empowerment, and the ability to execute, and you do not second-guess on the strategy. That requires a certain amount of framework alignment, and I think the onus is on family businesses to make it work.
The third thing, I would say, is to focus. India is growing and has become very competitive and very organized. There are multiple competitors in each space. You have to put in your 150 percent no matter where you are. Otherwise, you cannot even have a shot at winning. Pick your spots, pick your focus, and don’t have that diversified sort of approach. Yes, you will have to make sharp choices. It’s not easy.
McKinsey: Looking ahead, where do you see the greatest investment opportunities in India over the next five to ten years?
Amit Dixit: From the Indian perspective, broadly, there can be two buckets: domestic and exports. In the domestic area, the digital consumer is a long-term theme. I’m purposefully using the term “digital consumer” and not “consumer” because I think the trend of consumption is becoming digital, whether it’s consumption in healthcare or consumption in retail moving to digital channels. Another big theme is the aging population and the impact on life sciences and healthcare. And the growth of financial services in India as GDP grows is expected to drive Indian savings away from real estate, gold, or other physical assets into financial assets. So, financial services is another multidecade trend.
In the exports area—opportunities where India has a global competitive advantage—exporting software services is a classic. It’s an almost $200 billion export industry for India. It is a big sector for Blackstone itself, both in private equity and real estate or real-estate tenants. We have also had very strong success now with manufacturing, where the opportunity—what we call the make-in-India opportunity— is much bigger than what we have tapped. India can be a manufacturer of a lot more goods, including pharmaceuticals and chemicals.
These are some of the themes I would focus on, both domestically and from an export standpoint, for a ten-year point of view.