(Courtesy of Getty Images) Premier Partners and Praxis Capital are on track to raise 1 trillion won ($680 million) in their respective funds after the two South Korean private equity firms swept the beauty contests to attract major Korean pension funds in 2024.
The two investment firms each manage about $1 billion in assets and focus on growth capital strategies. With strong track records, they outmaneuvered MBK Partners, with $30 billion in assets under management, in multiple competitions to win over leading Korean asset owners.
Eleven major institutional investors in Korea committed a total of 2.79 trillion won ($1.9 billion) to South Korea-based, large- and medium-sized private equity funds in 2024, excluding credit and small-cap strategies funds.
They include the National Pension Service (NPS), Government Employees Pension Service (GEPS), Korea Scientists and Engineers Mutual-Aid Association (SEMA), Military Mutual Aid Association (MMAA), Korea Development Bank (KDB) and Export Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM).
MG Community Credit Cooperatives, Korea Post, the Korea Federation of SMEs (KBIZ), the Pension Foundation of the Presbyterian Church of Korea and the radioactive waste management fund under the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy also committed to those funds in 2024.
Private equity firm's name
Major Korean limited partners in 2024
Target fund size
Premier Partners
NPS, KDB, KEXIM, SEMA and four others
More than 1 trillion won
Praxis Capital
NPS, GEPS, MG Community, MMAA and three others
800 billion-1 trillion won
JKL Partners
NPS, KDB, MG Community and KBIZ
800 billion won
MBK Partners
NPS, GEPS, Radioactive Waste Management Fund
$7 billion
(Source: Premier Partners, Praxis Capital, JKL Partners and MBK Partners)
Premier Partners, which specializes in venture capital and growth capital, reaped juicy returns from minority stake investments in SK IE Technology Co. (SKIET) and three-dimensional dental scanner maker Medit Corp.
Praxis focuses on middle-market buyouts and growth capital investments in Korea.
It notched handsome returns from Doosan Robotics Inc., a collaborative robot manufacturer, equivalent to 6.5 times its investment in just two years.
JKL Partners also stood out among Korean PE firms. After winning commitments from the NPS as well as KDB, it seeks to raise 800 billion won in a mid-cap strategy fund.
The National Pension Service's Investment Management office building in Jeonju, North Jeolla province MBK PARTNERS
(Courtesy of Getty Images) Armed with new money, the three Seoul-based PE firms and MBK are expected to lead Korea’s M&A market over the next few years, as buyout firms tend to deploy 70-80% of their funds within the first two to three years after fundraising.
By comparison, VIG Partners, a first-generation homegrown PE house, lagged behind its local peers in the fundraising race. For the second straight year in 2024, it failed to win an NPS mandate.
Centroid Investment Partners and E&F Private Equity also performed poorly in 2024 fundraising.
Write to Jong-Kwan Park and Ji-Eun Ha at pjk@hankyung.com Yeonhee Kim edited this article.
We use cookies to provide the best user experience. By continuing to browse this website, you will be considered to accept cookies. Please review our Privacy Policy to learn our cookie policy.