India’s private equity machine powers up
ChrysCapital’s $2.2 billion fund and renewed global interest signal a structural shift in India’s private equity sector


This was a week of unusually large signalling in India’s private equity (PE) landscape.
On Wednesday, ChrysCapital, the country’s biggest homegrown PE firm, closed its latest fund at $2.2 billion, the largest PE fund raised by an India-focussed manager. The development highlights Indian funds can now attract capital at a scale historically reserved for global buyout houses.
Earlier this week, KKR’s global co-chief executive Scott C Nuttall said the firm expects to invest between $90 billion and $100 billion globally in 2025, and that the India portfolio “will increasingly resemble the firm’s global profile over time”. India—along with Japan—is KKR’s best-performing market in Asia with the strongest returns, he during an interaction in Mumbai.
The ChrysCapital close sets a new benchmark for domestic firms. The earlier record was with Kedaara Capital, which raised a $1.7 billion fund in 2024.
Seven global funds now have Asia PE heads or co-heads based in Mumbai. These include Amit Dixit at Blackstone and Gaurav Trehan at KKR. Five years ago, there were none.
Blackstone, which has about $50 billion worth of PE and real estate investments in India, has singled out India as its best investment market in the world. And KKR, which has invested $9 billion in equity in India since 2020, said it is eyeing new sectors in the country.
India was Asia-Pacific’s top performer in 2024—the only country with double-digit growth in both deal value and count, according to Bain & Company’s Asia-Pacific Private Equity Report 2025.
India stood out even in terms of exits. It was the region’s largest exit market last year by value and count, supported by a vibrant IPO market.
In emerging and growth markets, India captured nearly 41 percent of PE capital inflows this year, ahead of China’s 34 percent.
Also Read: ChrysCapital closes new fund with record $2.2 billion raise
Another near-term risk is the US tariff policy. However, until there is clarity on that, both domestic and global PEs are betting that India will outperform other markets.
(With inputs from Bloomberg)
First Published: Nov 06, 2025, 11:02
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