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Lotus

Lotus was founded in Beijing in 2005 by principals including Himanshu Saxena, Faisal Ashraf, Abhishek Khetan, Dirk Markus, and Christian Mack.

Lotus logo

Lotus

Lotus was founded in Beijing in 2005 by principals including Himanshu Saxena, Faisal Ashraf, Abhishek Khetan, Dirk Markus, and Christian Mack. While the origin of the underlying wealth has not been publicly disclosed, the firm's operating structure suggests capital generated across multiple jurisdictions and business lines, with founders maintaining distinct leadership roles in Lotus Infrastructure Partners, Lotus Capital Partners, Lotus Singapore Group, Lotus AG in Luxembourg, and Lotus Domaine. The firm deploys across real estate, infrastructure, energy, and private credit, with named holdings spanning hospitality, healthcare, and power generation. Confirmed assets include the Shore Club Private Collection and Kempinski Residences in Miami, the Duxton Reserve Hotel in Singapore, a medical-office portfolio in Florida, and the Brookhaven Energy Center in New York. The TenWest Link transmission project in California and Arizona and the GCA Ammonia Facility in Texas add regulated-infrastructure exposure. Geographic concentration tilts toward the United States and Singapore, with ancillary holdings in India and Europe. Lotus operates through a network of named entities rather than a single consolidated vehicle — Lotus Infrastructure Partners, Lotus Capital Partners, and Lotus AG in Luxembourg each carry distinct mandates. Founders Faisal Ashraf and Abhishek Khetan are members of YPO, and Ashraf also participates in Tiger 21. Philanthropic structures include the Khetan Foundation, Lotus Endowment Fund, Inc., and Lotus Life Foundation, though the separation of grantmaking from investment activity is not publicly detailed. A Dassault Falcon 50 appears in the firm's asset inventory. No public AUM or total-deployment figure exists. The firm's distinguishing architecture is its multi-hub, multi-entity structure, with no single parent holding company visible in public filings. Each principal appears to operate a semi-autonomous vehicle under the Lotus brand — a design that separates liability and investment mandates across geographies and asset classes, but also makes the full scope of the group difficult for any outside allocator to map from public record alone.

General information

Firm type

Single Family Office

Year founded

2005

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

Asia

Country

China

City

Orlando

Corporate office

Beijing, China

Additional offices

Singapore · Miami, FL · Luxembourg

Principals

Himanshu Saxena

Chairman and CEO of Lotus Infrastructure Partners

Faisal Ashraf

Managing Partner and CEO of Lotus Capital Partners

Abhishek Khetan

Managing Director of Lotus Singapore Group

Dirk Markus

Director of Lotus AG (Luxembourg Family Office)

Christian Mack

Managing Partner of Lotus Domaine

Sector focus

Real EstateInfrastructureEnergy Transition & RenewablesHealthcare ServicesLuxuryPrivate Credit

Frequently asked questions

Who runs investment decisions at Lotus?

Lotus does not operate under a single CIO. Instead, named founders lead distinct vehicles: Himanshu Saxena runs Lotus Infrastructure Partners, Faisal Ashraf leads Lotus Capital Partners, and Abhishek Khetan oversees Lotus Singapore Group, per Altss research. Dirk Markus and Christian Mack manage Lotus AG in Luxembourg and Lotus Domaine, respectively. This distributed structure means investment decisions are made within each entity rather than through a central investment committee.

Is Lotus structured as a single family office or a holding company?

Lotus resembles a holding company more than a traditional single family office. Rather than managing a unified pool of capital from one balance sheet, the principals operate separate branded entities — Lotus Infrastructure Partners, Lotus Capital Partners, Lotus Singapore Group, Lotus AG, and Lotus Domaine — each with its own mandate and geographic focus. No single parent entity consolidates the group in public filings.

Does Lotus participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?

The known asset base consists entirely of direct holdings — hotels, residential developments, medical offices, and infrastructure projects. There is no public evidence of Lotus acting as a limited partner in third-party funds. The firm's apparent preference for operational control and direct ownership aligns with its distributed entity structure.

What is Lotus's known posture on co-investments alongside external GPs?

Lotus has not publicly disclosed co-investment relationships with external managers. The firm's visible holdings — including the Shore Club Private Collection in Miami Beach and the Brookhaven Energy Center in New York — appear to be wholly or majority-owned. Without disclosed AUM or a fundraising track record, its appetite for passive co-investment alongside GPs remains unconfirmed.

Where does the underlying wealth come from?

The origin of Lotus's capital has not been publicly disclosed. The founding group includes individuals with ties to China, India, Europe, and the United States, and the firm's Beijing headquarters alongside a Luxembourg entity suggests capital may have been accumulated across multiple jurisdictions. Without a named wealth-creating event or operating company exit, the source remains private.

Does Lotus maintain philanthropic structures, and how are they separated?

Lotus lists three affiliated philanthropic entities: the Khetan Foundation, Lotus Endowment Fund, Inc., and Lotus Life Foundation. The nature of their separation from the investment entities is not publicly detailed — whether they function as grantmaking foundations or donor-advised structures is unclear from available records.

Which sectors does Lotus explicitly avoid?

Lotus has not published an exclusion list or stated negative screens. The visible portfolio tilts toward hard assets — real estate, infrastructure, and energy — with no disclosed exposure to venture capital, public equities, or large-cap buyout funds. This absence may reflect a deliberate preference for tangible, long-duration assets rather than a formal exclusion policy.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

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