Indian Alternative Investment Firms Face Gulf Capital Slowdown Amid Regional Conflict
High-net-worth individuals, family offices and sovereign investors in Gulf become cautious, creating fundraising vacuum
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- Indian alternative investment firms are experiencing a sharp decline in fresh capital commitments from Gulf investors as regional conflicts make high-net-worth individuals, family offices and sovereign investors more cautious.
- Several India-focused firms that expanded to the Gulf in recent years are now redrawing fundraising plans and exploring investors in Africa and Europe instead.
- Nisus Finance, which launched a $500 million Gulf-focused real estate fund in Dubai in August 2024, reports soft commitments but investors waiting for the "fog of war" to clear.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Indian alternative investment firms are experiencing a sharp decline in fresh capital commitments from Gulf investors as regional conflicts make high-net-worth individuals, family offices and sovereign investors more cautious. Several India-focused firms that expanded to the Gulf in recent years are now redrawing fundraising plans and exploring investors in Africa and Europe instead. Nisus Finance, which launched a $500 million Gulf-focused real estate fund in Dubai in August 2024, reports soft commitments but investors waiting for the "fog of war" to clear.