Ex-Goldman Goldfinger raises $2.5 billion fund: sources
Goldfinger is back in the market and has a new focus -- Asia.
Mount Kellett Capital, a private equity firm run by former Goldman Sachs partner Mark McGoldrick, has completed raising about $2.5 billion for its first fund with a focus on Asia, especially China, two people with knowledge of the details told Reuters.
McGoldrick earned his nickname while at Goldman Sachs where, as co-head of its lucrative global special situations group, media reported he was paid $40-$70 million in 2006.
The Asia-focused firm, which McGoldrick and former Goldman colleagues launched early last year, initially set a target to raise about $5 billion, but pared this back as markets fell sharply late last year, said the sources, who declined to be identified as they were not authorized to speak to the media.
A representative for Mount Kellett could not be immediately reached for comment.
In fact, it's not that bad at all. $2.5 billion is a very impressive number in such a tough market environment, said one of the sources.
Along with scaling back its original target, Mount Kellett also shifted its global investment scale to focus on Asia, especially China, said the sources.
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Mount Kellett, named after a mountain in Hong Kong and also known as MKC, has an office in the former British colony with about 10 investment professionals seeking deals across Asia, especially in China and India, said one person familiar with operations.
Even before the firm raised its first $2.5 billion fund, MKC executives had begun talks with several Chinese firms for potential investments, the person said.
It's a new firm, but it has a big appetite from the start, said the source, who is bidding against Mount Kellett for one China deal.
People are talking about Mount Kellett and you can actually see these guys on many big deals these days. They are apparently an aggressive investor, he said, declining to elaborate.
The ideal deal size for Mount Kellett would be about $100 million, he said -- a similar target range to other investment firms such as Primus and FountainVest that are run by ex-senior bankers.
In April, Robert Morse, a former top Asia executive of Citigroup (C.N), and two former colleagues launched Primus after raising $1 billion.
FountainVest, launched late last year, is a $1 billion China-dedicated fund backed by Singapore's sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings TEM.UL.
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(Editing by Ken Wills and Ian Geoghegan)
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