Luckin Coffee startup backer raises over $2bn

China’s Centurium Capital, a big backer of domestic startup Luckin Coffee, said it has raised more than $2 billion in its debut fund. (Reuters)
Updated 03 July 2019
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Luckin Coffee startup backer raises over $2bn

  • US dollar fund will help firm invest in Chinese VIEs
  • Centurium invested $180m in Luckin Coffee’s first two funding rounds

HONG KONG: China’s Centurium Capital, a big backer of domestic startup Luckin Coffee, said it has raised more than $2 billion in its debut fund, giving the private equity firm more firepower to cut deals involving the world’s second-largest economy.

The firm, co-founded by the former head of Warburg Pincus Asia Pacific, David Li, said on Wednesday that Centurium Capital Partners 2018 L.P. raised the sum in US dollars.

The fund secured strong interest from global investors, known as limited partners (LPs), such as pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and funds-of-funds, it said.

Investors in the fund include Singapore’s GIC Pte Ltd. and Temasek Holdings, Canada’s Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, China Investment Corp. (CIC) and US pension fund Washington State Investment Board, said two people with knowledge of the matter.

Centurium declined to comment on the fund’s LPs. All the investors didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The US dollar fund will help Centurium invest in Chinese firms that use overseas structures such as variable-interest entities.

Centurium joins several China-focused private equity and venture capital managers who raised $17.3 billion in dollar-denominated funds in the first half of the year, versus $13 billion over the same period last year, according to data provider Preqin.

Launched in March 2018, Centurium’s maiden fund reached the first close of nearly $1 billion three months later and has beaten the $1.5 billion and $1.98 billion fundraising targets since then.

Beijing-based Centurium was set up in early 2017 by Li and two other partners. Li had worked with Warburg Pincus for 14 years and led several investments for the US buyout firm in China, including in top car rental service provider CAR Inc. 

“After helping several entrepreneurs fulfill their entrepreneurial dream for so many years, I also have my dream of launching our own (investment) firm,” Li said.

Centurium primarily seeks control and significant minority investment opportunities across China’s consumer, services and health care sectors where it looks to boost operational efficiency and tackle structural deficiencies.

“The Chinese business environment nowadays needs a new generation of investors that combine the global PE best practice and local experience,” Li said.

“Instead of being a pure capital provider, firms like Centurium can better integrate with local markets, and be more efficient and responsive to provide bespoke local solutions to new challenges and opportunities.”

Centurium began to gain recognition last year when it made a big bet on Luckin Coffee, the Chinese challenger to Starbucks Corp. It invested about $180 million in Luckin in the startup’s first two fundraising rounds.

Li said that Centurium has invested about 40 percent of the capital raised in the debut fund in five firms in China and aims to fully deploy the fund by the end of next year.


Second firm ends DP World investments over CEO’s Epstein ties

Updated 12 February 2026
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Second firm ends DP World investments over CEO’s Epstein ties

  • British International Investment ‘shocked’ by allegations surrounding Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem
  • Decision follows in footsteps of Canadian pension fund La Caisse

LONDON: A second financial firm has axed future investments in Dubai logistics giant DP World after emails surfaced revealing close ties between its CEO and Jeffrey Epstein, Bloomberg reported.

British International Investment, a $13.6 billion UK government-owned development finance institution, followed in the footsteps of La Caisse, a major Canadian pension fund.

“We are shocked by the allegations emerging in the Epstein files regarding (DP World CEO) Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem,” a BII spokesman said in a statement.

“In light of the allegations, we will not be making any new investments with DP World until the required actions have been taken by the company.”

The move follows the release by the US Department of Justice of a trove of emails highlighting personal ties between the CEO and Epstein.

The pair discussed the details of useful contacts in business and finance, proposed deals and made explicit reference to sexual encounters, the email exchanges show.

In 2021, BII — formerly CDC Group — said it would invest with DP World in an African platform, with initial ports in Senegal, Egypt and Somaliland. It committed $320 million to the project, with $400 million to be invested over several years.