For decades India’s corporate landscape has been dominated by companies that were associated with families such as the Tatas, Birlas, Jindals, Ambanis, Adanis and hundreds more. Many of these families, often known as “promoters” might not have large stake in the publicly listed corporations, but they still exercise great authority in board level decisions.
Today the landscape is starting to shift. India is transitioning from a market dominated by minority stakes to a premier destination for control buyouts. This transformation is fueled by a mindset shift among business founders who are increasingly open to partnerships for succession planning or scaling operations. The ecosystem is further supported by deep liquidity and robust capital markets, offering clear exit paths such as IPOs and M&A. Crucially, the availability of top-tier C-suite talent allows PE firms to implement sophisticated value-creation strategies across high-growth sectors such as healthcare, technology, and infrastructure.
Insights from Economic Times “Now Global Business Summit 2026:
The Control Shift: Greg Zeluck, Managing Director and the Co-Head of Asia Buyout at Carlyle noted that private equity firms can now acquire majority stakes in Indian companies, moving beyond simple minority investments to full operational control.
Talent as a Catalyst: The surge in world-class management professionals in India enables investors to overhaul and professionalize businesses post-acquisition.
Market Maturity: Enhanced liquidity and active secondary markets have made it significantly easier for firms to enter and exit large-scale deals.
Sector Focus: While the overall economy is expanding, specific growth is concentrated in infrastructure, healthcare, and digital technology, backed by both government policy and rising consumer demand.

From Informal to Institutional
Succession in India used to be a private, often unsaid topic discussed behind closed doors. Now, it has become a boardroom priority:
Trusts and Holding Companies: Families are using sophisticated legal structures to “ring-fence” wealth, ensuring that even if the leadership changes, the financial benefits remain secure for future generations.
Proactive Planning: According to recent 2026 surveys, over 50% of Indian family businesses now treat succession as a mainstream strategic priority, moving away from informal verbal agreements.
Instead of a messy multi-generational handover, selling a majority stake to a global PE firm such as Carlyle, blackstone or KKR ensures the company gets the capital and leadership it needs to thrive. It also accelerated the transition to professionalized management culture – this is good for the companies and for the Indian economy
