Helios’s Arora to Start India ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ Stock Fund 
 
 
June 2  -- Helios Capital Management Pte, the hedge-fund manager once backed by 
Tudor Investment Corp., plans to start a “Slumdog Millionaire” fund that will 
buy underperforming shares of Indian companies. 
“We want to find slumdogs from the Indian equity markets who have the potential 
of becoming millionaires,” Samir Arora, founder of Singapore-based Helios 
Capital, said in an interview. 
The firm plans to raise about $50 million by the end of July for its long-only 
Helios India Jai Ho Fund, Arora said. “Jai Ho,” which means “victory” in Hindi, 
is the Oscar- winning theme song from “Slumdog Millionaire,” a feel-good tale 
of a Mumbai orphan’s escape from poverty that scooped eight Academy Awards, 
including best picture, this year in Los Angeles. 
India’s benchmark Sensitive Index, or Sensex, has jumped 54 percent this year, 
making it the world’s sixth-best performer, and partially reversing last year’s 
record decline. The index surged a record 17 percent on May 18 as investors bet 
the ruling Congress party’s biggest election victory in two decades will enable 
it to ease foreign investment rules and sell state assets -- policies stalled 
by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s communist partners in his previous term. 
The Jai Ho fund plans to start by investing in stocks that have fallen at least 
50 percent since the end of 2007, which marked the end of India’s five-year 
bull run, said Arora, who has been investing in Indian equities since 1993. 
Nine of the 50 members of the broader National Stock Exchange of India Ltd.’s 
S&P CNX Nifty index have lost more than 50 percent since Dec. 31, 2007, 
according to data compiled by Bloomberg. These companies include Tata Motors 
Ltd., the truck maker that owns Jaguar and Land Rover, and DLF Ltd., the 
nation’s largest developer. 
Buying ‘Survivors’ 
“There are many, many companies that have survived the past 18 months with 
dignity and we want to focus on such companies,” Arora said. “The idea is to 
buy stocks in companies that do not have life threatening debt, are sure shot 
survivors and have become cheap on some appropriate parameters.” 
The Sensex’s members are valued at an average price of 2.7 times the book value 
of their assets, compared with an average of 4 times in the past three years, 
according to Bloomberg data. 
Shares of firms that have seen strategic investors, such as company management 
or private equity firms, increase or take stakes in them over the past year 
will be targeted, Arora said. 
“This universe is not super big but we plan to buy 25-30 names,” he said, 
declining to identify specific companies. 
The manager plans to raise money from institutional investors in Europe and the 
U.S. as well as wealthy individuals in the Middle East, Arora said. 
Tudor Stake 
Helios, which has five investment professionals, already manages an 
India-focused hedge fund, the Helios Strategic Fund, that bets on rising and 
falling stocks. Arora declined to provide details on his funds’ performance. 
In April, Helios bought back “in a friendly transaction” the 15 percent stake 
that Tudor, the $10.5 billion Greenwich, Connecticut-based hedge-fund firm run 
by Paul Tudor Jones, held in the Singapore manager, Arora said. 
Arora was the head of Asian emerging markets at Alliance Capital Management 
Holding LP, now known as AllianceBernstein Holding LP, and the chief investment 
officer of the U.S. money manager’s Indian mutual fund business from 1998 to 
2003. He moved to Mumbai from New York in 1993 to help Alliance Capital set up 
its Indian mutual fund business, after the government opened its stock market 
to foreign investors. 
Hedge funds are private, lightly regulated pools of capital whose managers can 
buy or sell any assets, bet on falling and rising asset prices, and participate 
in profits from money invested.
 
 
 



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