logo
BlackRock, Mubadala unwind partnership for Asia private credit: sources

BlackRock, Mubadala unwind partnership for Asia private credit: sources

Business Times2 days ago

[HONG KONG] BlackRock and Mubadala Investment have mutually agreed to unwind their Asian private credit partnership that focuses on investments in China and Indonesia due to challenges in sourcing deals, according to people familiar with the matter.
Under the partnership, which started in 2023, the Abu Dhabi state-owned investment firm was to match every US dollar that BlackRock agreed to put in, said the people, who requested not to be named because the information is private.
The world's largest asset allocators are forging alliances with private credit funds to capitalise on the rapidly expanding US$1.7 trillion private credit market. Mubadala is one of the most active investors in the space, building a portfolio of 73.5 billion dirhams (S$25.5 billion), backed by collaborations with firms including Apollo Global Management, Carlyle Group, and KKR.
BlackRock did not respond to a request for comment. Mubadala declined to comment.
The partnership has deployed only a limited amount of capital. Originating deals in China is proving difficult given the mid-teens return profile it's targeting, said the people.
The head of private credit in Indonesia, Christopher Ganis, left in the early days of the collaboration for sovereign wealth fund Indonesia Investment Authority. That's made it difficult for deal origination in the country, the people added.
BlackRock's head of Asia-Pacific private credit, Celia Yan, also left to join Apollo recently, just as the firm is finalising its integration with HPS Investment Partners.
BlackRock last year agreed to buy HPS in an all-stock deal valued at about US$12 billion. The transaction is expected to be completed in the middle of this year, pending regulatory approval. The combined platform will expand to a team of 22 private market investment professionals with senior investor additions in Singapore and Sydney, according to an internal memo. BLOOMBERG

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Commentary: China's AI dragons risk choking each other
Commentary: China's AI dragons risk choking each other

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

Commentary: China's AI dragons risk choking each other

TOKYO: It's a story that has played out many times in the history of China's tech sector. Notoriously fierce competition means that whenever a new craze comes along, scores of rivals emerge ready to pounce. Firms are then locked in a race to the bottom when it comes to pricing. The food delivery wars forced out smaller players over the years and led bubble tea – another consumer fad fallen prey – to be sold this month for as little as 1.68 yuan (less than US$0.25). A similar cutthroat market has left behind a trail of zombie cars in the electric vehicle sector. Now the same forces are in full swing in the booming artificial intelligence industry. The stakes could not be higher. The government is betting that the technology will uplift swaths of the economy. Eager to not be left behind, AI startups, including the so-called Little Dragons, are awash with funding, and even the Big Tech companies like Alibaba are going all-in. INTENSE COMPETITION For now, AI firms in China are focused on the tech industry's classic playbook: scaling up userbases and racing for market share. But a key difference this time around is that nobody has actually cracked the key to getting consumers to pay. DeepSeek and open-sourcing breakthroughs have made some headway in cutting down on costs, but eventually something will have to give. It has all undoubtedly spurred a vibrant innovation ecosystem and the widespread adoption of AI applications. But it has also forced players to slash prices and even offer services for free, making the industry's path to monetisation uncertain. The intense competition means the biggest risk for Chinese AI firms may not be Washington's chip curbs or other external factors, but each other. It represents a stark contrast to the dominance of a few large players in Silicon Valley. For example, China's top 10 global AI chatbots generated just US$1 million in revenue from Apple's iOS app store in the last 12 months ending in May, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts wrote in a note last week. Most of this came from Baidu's Ernie Bot, which stopped charging consumers in March. By contrast, OpenAI's ChatGPT bot alone garnered iOS revenue of $669 million in the same period. The dilemma has been simmering for a while. At a tech conference last year, Baidu CEO Robin Li criticised the abundance of AI models in China, complaining of a 'significant waste of resources, particularly computing power'. At the same conference, the CEO of MiniMax, one of the Little Dragons, predicted a major consolidation on the horizon. NOBODY WILLING TO BACK OUT OF THE RAT RACE An industry concentration would help ameliorate some of the pressures. But instead, the release of DeepSeek's market-moving reasoning model earlier this year has only spurred fresh pandemonium. Nobody seems willing to back out of the rat race anytime soon. There were more than 3,700 registered generative AI tools operating in China, according to one analysis of government registration data as of April, and cyberspace administrators were approving roughly 250 to 300 new products per month. Not all will survive. Some firms may be tempted to seek growth abroad. But geopolitical realities may get in the way of making it in overseas markets, where consumers have shown more willingness to pay for AI services. Already, countries from Australia to Italy are restricting the use of DeepSeek or banning it on government devices. There was brief hope that the rise of AI agents would offer a way to differentiate a company's products, but even this has already become a crowded field. This puts the Little Dragons at higher risk. Tech giants like Alibaba, ByteDance and Tencent have more resources to play the long game, especially in a sector marked by high costs for chips and computing resources. Official support and insatiable hype remains a strong propellant of China's AI sector. A former top official predicted earlier this week that the nation is on the cusp of generating more than 100 DeepSeek-like breakthroughs. But in the long run, it seems just as likely to produce at least a hundred zombie chatbots or AI agents.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store