Monday, August 27, 2018

Dharti ka Lal







Dharti ka Lal loosely translates as the darling son of the soil, a epitaph often used fondly for Lal Bahadur Shastri, the 2nd Prime Minister of India. Shastri, who lead the nation for less than 2 years was in every way the son of the soil: as the martial son leading the country to victory in the 1965 Indo-Pak war and as the custodian son propelling the country towards self sufficiency in food generation through Green & White revolutions.


Shastri's style of governance is very well highlighted from the Kaira incident, when, he along with the CM of Gujarat Balwantrai Mehta, stayed at the home of Ramanbhai Punjabhai Patel, a small farmer from a village in Kaira for a night before the planned inauguration of the India's first modern cattle feed plant AMUL had just build in Kaira. It is said that the entire night, Shashtri moved around freely in the village of Ajarpura talking to farmers who were members of one of the first village cooperatives under AMUL, asking them questions about the yield of their buffalos, income earned, incentive structures for production etc. The leader of Indian democracy whose diminutive figure belied his gigantic thoughts and vision welcomed himself to the homes of farmers, Harijjans, Muslims quizzing them till 2 AM in the night about their way of life. I am reproducing the interaction Shashtri had with Varghese Kurian, the milkman of India and the general manager of AMUL the next day where he explained his behaviour of the previous night

‘Under the Second and Third Five Year Plans, we have built so many dairies. All of them owned and run by the government. All of them unmitigated disasters, running at a loss. But I heard Amul dairy and its products are liked throughout the country. It is available throughout the country and has an extremely high growth rate every year. I want to know why this particular dairy is a success when all the others have failed. That is why I decided that I would stay here and find out. And that is why I spent a night with the villagers, trying to fathom the reasons for the success of Anand’s Amul dairy. But I am sorry to say, Kurien, that I have failed.

‘I looked at the soil. Good soil, but not as good as the Indo-Gangetic plains. I asked about the climate here. Cold in winter, very hot in summer, I was told. So it is in most of India. Nothing special. I enquired about the rainfall. Thirty inches of rain for three months of the year during the monsoon – much like the rest of the country. I had expected to see the entire landscape green, with cattle grazing contentedly, but the whole place is brown, just like the rest of India. I did not find any abundant availability of fodder and feed here. I looked at your buffaloes and don’t mind my saying this, Kurien, but they are not as good as the buffaloes in my home state of Uttar Pradesh. Those buffaloes are certainly better and even give more milk. Lastly, I looked at your farmers. They’re good people – farmers are always good people – but they are not as hardworking as the farmers of Punjab. I can’t find a single reason why Anand is such a great success. Now, can you please tell me what is the secret of its success?’

Believe it or not, the PM was trying to understand the business model of AMUL and what makes it a success? He had come ready with a hypothesis which he tried to prove with data he collected on ground. In modern management lexicon, he did what a CEO does while trying to figure out how his competitor is making money when his enterprise is failing. A welcome change in the world of politicians with zero accountability.

Kurian answered the PM explaining the reason for AMUL's success is the corporative spirit of the organisation and the fact that it is run by a professional manager who is an employee of the farmers and his commitment to the enterprise was as strong as the trust he enjoyed from his employers: the farmers. 

The Prime Minister, who had been listening avidly, looked excited and said, ‘Kurien, this means that we can have many Anands. There are no special reasons to have an Anand only in Gujarat.’

‘So then, Kurien,’ he continued, ‘from tomorrow you shall make it your business to work not just for Anand, not just for Gujarat , but for the whole of India. The Government of India will give you a blank cheque, it will create any body, any structure you want, provided you will head it. Please replicate Anand throughout India. Make that your mission and whatever you need for it, the government will provide.’ 

The characteristic style of a leader is to find the right person for the right job and to make quick decisions without wasting time. He knew clearly from the way AMUL was managed that Kurien is frugal with investment and enjoys the trust of the farmers. In other words, whatever he learned the night before and during his conversation with Kurien, he put in action immediately resulting in the creation of National Dairy Development Board which then helped establishing corporative diary units across the country like Mother Dairy, Milma (Kerala), Nandini (Karnataka), Aavin (TN) etc and propelling India as the largest milk producer in the world soon (we have lost this title to US again few years ago and stand 2nd today). The series of events which Shastri and Kurien set in action on that day is known to us as the White Revolution.

Shastri's tenure as the Prime Minister was strenuous from the word go: from the insurrection in Kashmir and NE to the Naga problem to the South India's rebellion against imposition of Hindi and of course the biggest of all- the 1965 Indo-Pak war. Strangely, it was the attack of Pakistan army on that 1st Sept that really established Shastri as the "tall" leader of the nation. Unlike Nehru during the Chinese fiasco, he quickly decided to bring in IAF to support the infantry thus defeating the Pakistan army's attempt to isolate J&K from Punjab. He also decisively went by the army's recommendation to cross the border and attack Lahore thus forcing the Kashmir front forces of Pakistan army to rush back. Shastri, a Gandhian and a firm believer of peace and compromise rose to be the unlikely war hero who united the country with his slogan 'Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan'. When Pakistani army sang 'Has ke liya hai Pakistan, ladh ke lenge Hindustan' (We achieved Pakistan laughing, we will take Hindustan fighting), Shastri praised his country men: the brave soldiers fighting at the front and the humble kisan toiling the field to produce food for the nation. His call united the nation from Kashmir to Kerala and the Muslim brothers of Kashmir which Ayub Khan (Pakistan's dictator) and his forces had planned to free from India suddenly fought Pakistan side by side the Indian military.

Being a Congressman, Gandhian and Nehruvian, Shastri tried to continue with most of the socialist, democratic and secular principles established by his predecessor. However, he had a very practical and hands-on streak in his style which differentiated him from the occasionally fabian style of Nehru. Moving away from Nehru's India which was taught to admire hydroelectric dams and blast furnaces, Shastri increased budget allocation towards agriculture. Increasing food production and making the nation self sufficient in food supply was one of the primary objectives of his administration. He appointed C Subramaniam, one of the most able ministries from Nehru cabinet as the Agriculture minister (ironically Subramaniam was the Steel Minister under Nehru clearly showing the change in priority). Subramaniam with his 2 aides: B Sivaraman and M S Swaminathan put in action a series of reforms like introduction of mechanisation in farming, use of high yielding seeds etc cumulatively leading to large scale increase in grain production, the exercise which is famous today as the Green revolution.

When Shastri was elected the leader of Congress party and the Prime Minister, party President Kamaraj had said that the undisputed rule of a great man would now be replaced by collective leadership. However, Shastri had other plans; he had a mind of his own and everything he did as the PM was clearly his way and never the Syndicate's collective decisions. If there was anything collective in his times; it was his leadership which got the entire country into a collective under him. This could be clearly seen from the millions who thronged to see him in his final journey after the unfortunate death in Tashkent; a crowd, some say, which even rivalled the numbers who came to see his predecessor off 20 months ago. 

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Parsi Elite of Bombay Part 2: The Phantom of Bombay House






"The Phantom of Bombay House" or Pallonji Shapoorji Mistry is one of those unsung heroes of the Indian business who build an empire from nothing over generations. Like Tatas, the story of his family is one of dedication, hard work and razor sharp focus. It's a pity that very little is known about this reclusive billionaire and most of the details are based on the stories Bombay house old timers like to fondly share with anyone interested in the legendary history of Tata empire.

Mistry family's legendary story begins around the same time when Jamshedji Tata was starting off Tata & Sons along with his sons and nephew. That was when Pallonji Shapoorji Mistry (Cyrus' great grandfather) established Littlewood Pallonji Construction business in Mumbai. His son Shapoorji Pallonji Mistry (Cyrus' grandfather) grew the business taking advantage of the construction boom witnessed during the growth of Mumbai and grew the firm into one of the leading construction companies in the country rechristening it- Shapoorji Pallonji Constructions. His son Pallonji Shapoorji Mistry (Cyrus' father) gave the firm a global footprint by executing multiple projects in Middle East along with superior commercial and residential work in India. His son Shapoorji Pallonji Mistry (Cyrus' brother) and Cyrus Pallonji Mistry further expanded the footprint to Africa and diversified into more complex projects like ports. Quite like the phantoms, who are unrecognisable in their deeds and identity over generations; the Mistrys have also toiled with single minded focus in growing their empire. The family practice of giving first born sons their father's name and the Parsi practice of using father's name as their middle name ends up giving an impression that the generations of Mistrys is the same person, quite like the Phantom.




Mistry's association with Tatas goes back to the years when Tatas were metamorphosing into an industrial empire and implementing Jamshedji's vision of industrialising India. Shapoorji (Cyrus' grandfather) helped the Tatas build Taj Mahal Hotel, Tata Steel factories and Tata Hydel Power plants with their construction expertise. The association didn't stop there and this is where it get tricky. The onerous investments on Tata Steel and Tata Hydro nearly bankrupted the group and Dorabji Tata had to heavily borrow money from their main financier FE Dinshaw. FE Dinshaw, an old friend of Tatas were completely invested into the Tata vision of industrialisation and was part of the board. The borrowed money which was never paid back was converted to 12.5% equity of Tata Sons. FE Dinshaw later in his life became close to Shapoorji Mistry when he hired him to build his palatial home in Pune. It is believed that Shapoorji saw value in Dinshaw's holding in the group and thus acquired it from Dinshaw's heirs. Ironically, the mansion Shapoorji build for Dinshaw today is Tata Management Training Centre (TMTC), the LBS IAS Academy Mussorie fashioned training centre for the new TAS batches. Shapoorji continued his buying of Tata Sons shares from the disgruntled siblings of JRD and steadily took his shareholding to over 18% over a period of time. It is said that JRD was deeply incensed by this intrusions of Mistry into his family heirloom but was powerless then to do anything.

After the death of Shapoorji, Pallonji Shapoorji Mistry aka the Phantom of Bombay House chose to mend bridges with JRD and gave him a free hand to run the empire without any interference. Like a seasoned investor who just found the right CEO, Pallonji might have found the arrangement perfect- a capable captain in JRD growing his wealth manifold. He confined himself to one board seat knowing well that it will be impossible to challenge JRD. Rather he focused on his construction empire building it from strength to strength; some time at the expense of Tatas. All construction contracts of Tata factories were a monopoly of Shapoorji Pallonji Construction. Pallonji's firms even had the right to first refusal on businesses Tatas were disinvesting; Forbes India was taken over through this agreement. With his omnipresence in the background and boardroom and obsessive reclusiveness, Pallonji soon acquired the sobriquet of the Phantom of Bombay house. When JRD decided to step down and pass the mantle to RNT, Pallonji steadfastly supported the successor helping him immensely in his battle against the satraps Rusy Modi (Tata Steel), Durbari Seth (Tata Chemicals) etc who wanted one of them as the next chairman.

The Phantom's handiwork didn't end there; it is said that it was Pallonji who coerced RNT to take TCS publish. TCS being private would have given Tata chairman free hand on how to use its large profits while a listed TCS would have vastly increased the wealth of its holding company Tata Sons. It is said that RNT agreed to take TCS public only after Mistry agreed to participate in a share buyback deal of Tata Sons thus bringing his shareholding to 18% which exists even today.

"There are countless such incidents when Phantom's signature was visible in the monumental decisions taken by that Tata board and chairman" vouched a Bombay House old timer over a streaming cup of coffee during our days when the first Starbucks store was getting set up at Elphinstone building below my TRIL office. "But his finest hour was when his son Cyrus took over from RNT. I am sure he was coerced into it. Otherwise why will a person who was earlier entrusted to search for RNT's successor become the candidate all of sudden. Mistry's think the power is finally theirs but RNT is still the chairman of the Trusts and that is where the power truly rests." As we saw from the incidents which followed a few years later, true power was indeed with RNT and he exercised it when he felt it was needed. Is the Phantom lurking in the shadows, preparing for the next battle, only time will tell!

Monday, August 14, 2017

63 years of India's Union Territories

At the southern tip of Kannur, just before you cross to Kozhikode district, there is tiny town called Mahe. Known today for its duty free liquor and breezy beaches; this tiny enclave was known as a powerful French settlement during the British rule. So much so that Mahe river which separated the British-ruled Cannanore and French-ruled Mahe was known as the English channel in India. Today, Mahe which is geographically in Kerala, is an administrative section of the Pondicherry union territory which is 600+ km from the town. Unlike the logic of linguistics which governed Indian states' integration, the consolidation and integration of India's union territories is not something which followed much of logic. One can compare the creation of our 7 union territories to the countries of African continents- cartographed with a stroke of pen by colonial bosses.

Inline with what we all have learned in our junior classes, India has 7 union territories: Delhi, Chandigarh, Pondicherry (now Puducherry), Daman and Dui, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Lakshadweep and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Let's look at the story of how each of them came into being.

Pondicherry was created in 1954 after the transfer of French ruled Indian territories to the Republic of India. The districts of Pondicherry, Karaikal in TN, Mahe in Kerala & Yanaon in AP which were ruled by a French governor continued being a single administrative unit and started getting called Pondicherry union territory. Later it was given partial statehood and allowed to have an elected CM and a council of ministers who will rule the 4 districts hidden away in 3 big states around them.

Similar to Puducherry which was a segregation of French Indian territories, Goa-Daman & Diu-Dadra & Nagar Haveli were Portuguese territories. Unlike the sensible French who read the writing on the wall and transferred French India to Republic of India, Portuguese were adamant and refused any such transfer of territories. In 1954, 15 revolutionaries from United front of Goa liberated Dadra & Nagar Haveli after over powering a sleepy resistance and hoisted tricolour. Portuguese strongholds of Goa, Daman and Diu which they had ruled for almost 450 years was annexed by the Indian army in 1961. The territories were maintained as 2 separate union territories- Goa Daman Diu and Dadra & Nagar Haveli till 1984 when Goa attained statehood leaving 3 districts on the western coast as 2 union territories.

Chandigarh, the dream city of Nehru, was created for Punjab which lost Lahore in partition. The city was designed to be a crown jewel of India and Chandigarh till this date is a city par excellence. It's well planned roads, streets and greenery is an aberration in India. When East Punjab was trifurcated in 1966 into Punjab, Haryana and Himachal, Chandigarh was declared a union territory and the shared capital of Punjab and Haryana. It's anybody's guess as to why? Who would want to part with the crown jewel!

The union territories of Lakshadweep and Andaman & Nicobar islands were created since they were islands, far from the mainland and though large in size, there seemed to be nobody in the ruling provincial government and INC then who would argue for creation of states with electorate in these islands. In short, these were set aside as union territories temporarily as nobody cared and government had far more pressing issues to sort out.

I don't need to say much about Delhi. The seat of the Federal government can't be ruled by a state government, the logic was used to first make Delhi a union territory and then subsequently call it National Capital Region. The logic prevails in most of the seats of Federal governments across the world like Canberra, DC etc. Delhi was also allowed to have an elected state government of its own though the control of key administrative units like Municipal Corporation Delhi, Delhi Police are with the Union Ministry of Home Affairs, GoI.

When the youngest state in India today, Telangana was getting created, there was a discussion of Hyderabad being made a union territory so that it can be made the shared capital of AP and TS. Unlike Chandigarh, Hyderabad is not located at the border of 2 states and the plan sounded like one which was cooked up to appease everyone. The story of India's union territories also seem to follow the same tone: "cook up a solution to pass the problem". These territories seem to be decisions which were set aside for future because when the decision was made, the decision maker didn't know what to do or there was no pressing need. I guess, it was assumed that over a period of time, these territories will find their political voice and appeal for elected representative and local governments, quite like Puducherry, Himachal, Goa and Delhi did, first attaining partial statehood followed by full statehood. May be, some may amalgamate into their neighbouring state. However, as of now, these territories have established themselves as comfortable sweet spots within these states like Mahe as a haven for duty free alcohol in heavily taxed Kerala and Daman as a heaven for alcohol in the dry Gujarat. Their wait for an elected government will continue till they find their political voice; may be through someone like K Chandrashekhar Rao who decides to be the CM of one of these provinces.


 

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Operation Demonetisation

At the onset, let me clear that I have been an "almost cashless" citizen ever since digital wallets were invented. Since the "dramatic" night of Nov 8th, I am absolutely cashless without even one rupee in my Titan wallet. Government of India subsidised my engineering and management education at NIT and IIM with the hope that I will pay back as a tax payer, an obligation which I think I have lived up to in my life.

According to finance ministry data of 2014-15, 48 million Indians or 3.81% of population pays taxes and bank rolls this country. This number has gone up from 1% in 2012 after government started tightening the noose with a mix of policy and technology interventions. The number is this low not because we have got 97% poor people in country, it is because a large majority of Indians don't pay taxes and accumulate wealth as what we know today as black money or unaccounted money or tax unpaid money. Like most of the 3.81%, I also feel bad when I see a large majority who makes manifold times money than me pay nothing in taxes and happily blame their behaviour on the poor public services and inefficient bureaucracy which are not worth paying for. Honestly any tax paying Indian today will be happy to evade taxes if given an opportunity seeing how easy it is to have black money and still lead a "respectful" life. The black economy has become so ubiquitous that it's taken as a given today. Try buying a property in any leading city of the country and you will see people blatantly quote you 2 different rates when paid in cash and when paid through bank instruments. Today, people paying their taxes correctly is the most ill-treated minority of this nation- they work hard, they bank roll this country, they pay tolls at the toll booths, they stand in queues for a government certificate and a good majority of them don't even enjoy post retirement benefits. So like the PM, I think it's high time that the scrouge of black money is removed from the system.

Now let's understand a bit more about these 'black' money hoarders. There are a lot of different estimates for black money. If I follow what RBI estimates, there is 2.5 lac crore worth black money hoarded by Indians. Out of this, 65000 crore was declared during the recent window for declaring tax unpaid money. Another estimate by government says 1.2 lac crore is stashed abroad. That leaves us with 65000 crores of money available still in the domestic market currently. If we assume that all this money is stashed under the bed, inside the walls and below the floor of hoarder's homes which is extremely unlikely as black economy is a highly developed parallel channel in India and these individuals have figured out mechanisms to convert unaccounted money into appreciating assets. So the chance is that most of this money is invested in property, stored as dollars or share certificates or advanced as loans to small businesses which don't have access to modern banking. Anyway, let's assume 65K crore is under the carpet as cash. That means to recover 65000 crore, we just junked 14 lacs crore worth 500 and 1000 notes. So to fix 0.45% of the 14 lac crore, we just burned the entire hoard. No wonder Raghuram Rajan left without pushing for a second term (assuming RBI governor along with Economic advisor were the 2 people aware of the move 6-8 months ago). Reminds of a adage in Malayalam "Eliye pedich Illam chuttu" ie to fix the rat problem at home, I burned my house.

The notion that black money will be stored as cash by people who have been taking the government for a ride for last 60 years is naive. Naive part was the exact word used by RBI governor IG Patel when Janata Party moved to demonetise currency in 1978. The Modi demonetisation of Nov 8th however is just not a fight against black money as it is made out to now, it is also targeted at counterfeit currency and terror/corruption network which provides a mechanism to use the black money and get returns. With one shift move, government has starved these networks for at least an year providing the security forces and administration with a golden chance to nip it off. Will the administration be able to do it, is something only time will tell. The move now being made out to be a fight against black money is nothing more than a PR blitz to save the face after the disastrous implementation of the process.

However well intentioned the move, if the execution is a disaster, the outcome leaves a sour taste. If anyone has been put at inconvenience through this move that is the common man and businesses which all runs on cash. Even a new age business like e-commerce came to a standstill since almost 70% of the orders are CoD. Just imagine what would have happened with factories and small enterprises and their workers who were given daily or weekly wages. On top of all this, only Rs 2000 notes were given to people who queued in front of banks to exchange money; an usable denomination in an economy starved for smaller denomination notes. I don't understand what difference it could have made if announcement was made giving 2 weeks window when old notes are usable. In these 2 weeks:
1. ATMs would have got recaliberated to dispense new Rs 500 and 2000 notes
2. Exchanges of notes would have happened without effecting daily livelihood and businesses
3. Banks would have got enough time to exchange notes preventing people from wasting their office time to queue in front of banks

Also don't understand why Rs 2000 was launched before Rs 500. Government's explanation is that it is find people who have changed a lot of notes. I fail to understand how they will track Rs 2000 notes now if they have not been able to track Rs 1000 notes earlier.

The dramatic nature of the move is supported by saying black money hoarders would have found a way to hide their wealth if a window was given. This is the most ridiculous argument I have ever heard. The government claims it will find out people who have deposited large wealth in banks till Dec 30th and charge them 200% fine. Why is it that the same government would not have been able to monitor and find out who were moving their wealth out from cash to some other instruments or abroad in the window of conversion given. Every possible mechanism of moving money outside is controlled and monitored by government. The way GoI has gone about such an important activity seems to be ill planned from the word go.

Interestingly this move was done by a PM unilaterally whose party was against demonetisation of all currency issued before 2005 proposed by RBI in 2014. If Congress had done anything like that, BJP would have brought the country to a standstill. Protests all over the country would have forced the government to backtrack the operation. Thanks to the state of opposition or should I say lack of opposition, the idea has just sailed through and every voice against it is being stifled.

I want to reiterate that the idea to make all money in the economy accounted for is great and the use of electronic currency for everything is inline with the fantastic vision for our future but such poorly planned authoritarian decisions are only going to hurt the law abiding citizens. If decisions effecting the entire nation is going to made by 2 or 3 people at the top, dissolve the overpaid policy makers and think tanks and save some money of the honest taxpayer. After the demonetisation move, our finance minister came on TV proclaiming that such moves can't bring down tax since we are still a 5% deficit economy. When companies make losses, we look at cost cutting, why can't the nation do the same? Go for retrenchment and reduce the government expenditure by dissolving the policy makers/think tanks who are anyway not consulted on anything.



Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Parsi Elite of Bombay Part 1: Jinnah in love

He was 41 when he fell in love madly with the 16-year-old daughter of his friend Sir Dinshaw Petit. It is said that lover-lawyer argued his case with Dinshaw by first asking him innocuously his view on inter-community marriages. Once the liberal Parsi Dinshaw had gushed proclaiming inter-community marriages were the best way to solve the spreading communal hatred in India, his friend pleaded his case "Give me your daughter Ratanbhai's hand in marriage and live by your words on inter-community marriages". Dinshaw was aghast and refused the proposal tooth and nail. So the lovers decided to wait. Ratanbhai was from one of the most respected Parsi families in India and was the only daughter of Dinshaw Petit (scion of the cotton mill empire) and Sylla Tata (sister of JRD). 

Two years later, the day Ratanbhai aka Ruttie turned 18, she packed her bags and left her dad's house to marry Mohammed Ali Jinnah. It is said that those were the days Jinnah laughed a lot and was a romantic in love with his life. However, his first love- power soon returned to take Ratanbhai's place and he was once again fighting Nehru for the position of the supreme leader of India. Initially, the fight was within Congress. The liberal-secular Jinnah gelled in well and was soon one of the leading leaders of Indian National Congress. His tough schedule and obsession for power took the toll on his relationship with is wife and in the course of time, Ratanbhai left his side and his home.

Chroniclers of Taj Mahal Palace Mumbai will tell you that every day Jinnah climbed the central staircase to reach the top floor suite room to visit his beloved Ruttie when she was on her death bed. She stayed in the hotel since she had left both her father's and her husband's homes and was too proud to go back. The first ever attached bathroom of Taj Mahal Palace hotel was built for Ruttie since she couldn't walk to the bathroom area.

Ratanbhai died at an age of 29 leaving Jinnah with their daughter Dina. Jinnah soon came out of the grief of losing his wife and busied himself with political work and his successful legal practice. However, he soon realised that he did not have any future in INC with Nehru in his way. A devastated Jinnah went on a political sabbatical. He moved to London with his daughter and soon established a successful legal practice there.

Political power was his first love and it was impossible for Jinnah to keep away from it. He returned but this time as the orthodox head of a religious party: Muslim league. The ideals of the party he now represented were at 180 degrees to what Jinnah the individual believed in. That didn't matter to him; he saw an opportunity to be the supreme leader through Muslim league and that's all that mattered to him. He dusted out the idea of creation of a state for Muslim community covering 5 Northern Indian provinces: Punjab-NWFP(Afghan)-KashmIr-Sindh-BalochisTAN, a thesis put forward to him by a Cambridge student Rahmat Ali earlier; an idea he himself had rejected in his secular days. The thesis suddenly presented to him an opportunity to be the supreme leader of a state.

While Jinnah was trying to create history, history was repeating itself in his life. His daughter Dina fell in love with a Parsi Neville Wadia. The father by then was deep into the act of proving himself as a pious Muslim and won't let the inter-community marriage come in his way. Dina, like her mother, left her father and packed off with Wadia. Neville Wadia had then just started a trading firm called Bombay Burmah trading company. The company did well and soon metamorphosed into a clutch of enterprises. The Wadia group today is chaired by Dina's son Nusli Wadia and owns Britannia, Bombay Dyeing, GoAir among others. 

When India became independent, Jinnah flew to Islamabad alone leaving Bombay and his daughter's family forever. It is said that he visited his beloved Ruttie's grave in Mumbai with her favorite red roses on the day he flew out to the country he created leaving everything he had.
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Next: Parsi Elite of Bombay Part 2: The Phantom of Bombay House

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Savvy, Suave & Sharp Time Readers

Once upon a time, I met a drunk consultant who defined consulting in the coolest possible way I have ever heard “Consulting is all about borrowing your watch and telling you the time by it”. It was a remarkably candid explanation summing up a lot of things consultants do (alcohol can work wonders on you).
The consultants are curious creatures- they walk into your organization, the same place you have been working for donkey number of years, find problems which were always glaring at you for all these years, package them nicely and charge a bomb from you for their gyan. I am very tempted to say what most people who fail to make it to big consulting firms on campus say “Ah those blood sucking buggers who just gas around and charge big monies for it”. But let us not jump into that and look at things little deeper.
A few facts are true: consulting firms use kids, fresh out of B-schools with no real experience to help companies solve monumental business issues; the problems these firms find in the organization are not the ones which company is not aware about and they do charge a bomb. That’s quite obvious, they pay young, and smart champs fresh out of B-schools well; so they have to charge a bomb to run the system. But you cannot dismiss them as people who do nothing useful; if that was the case the profession would not have survived the tides of time. Let us look at a few scenarios where these time tellers are indispensible.
“I know that my watch shows the right time but I want a credible name to certify that my watch reads the right time”. When in college, we worked with a SMU which was into footwear manufacturing. The SMU asked us to make a 5 year strategy plan for them. The SMU also had E&Y working on the same project. The CEO of the SMU told us that they planned to apply for a big loan for their expansion and they wanted a globally reputed brand like E&Y to give them a detailed report adding credibility to their plans. He said that such a report will play a very important role in getting the loan sanctioned. Names like McKinsey, BCG, E&Y etc can really swing the decision in favor of you.
“I know that my watch reads the right time but my colleagues refuse to believe the time and keep reading a different time”. The CEO of the organization understands the problems of the company and wants to implement changes but the employees are against the changes, especially the top management. Generally the other power centers like the CFO, CIO etc gangs together and try to scuttle the changes. The CEO in need of a powerful backer brings an external agency to bring credibility to his arguments. The agency is generally a hot shot consulting name like McKinsey. This especially happens when the CEO is an outsider who has been inducted to get things right in an organization which is on its decline. When Louis V Gerstner arrived at IBM in 1993, his ideas were at 180 degrees to the existing wisdom at IBM. The IBM top management was after the “baby blue plan” which aimed at breaking down IBM into separate operational units and hiving them into separate companies which will have their own brands and a sleek cost structure. Gerstner on the other hand believed that the whole of IBM was greater than the sum of its babies. He also realized that IBM was wasting time on hardware and OS contradicting the strategic direction IBM was then taking. To take on the IBM racket, he brought an army of consultants from his previous organization (McKinsey). McKinsey, in its recommendation, provided the support Gerstner wanted backing the decisions with enough data and analysis which IBM syndicate found tough to argue against. This worked wonders at IBM and Gerstner eventually “made the elephant to dance”. But such interventions were always not successful. Jeffrey Skilling did the same thing in Enron and managed to mow the company down into dust and ended himself in prison.
“I am so busy cleaning my watch that I have no time to look at the time”. In most cases, company executives get so busy with their daily work that all the strategic aspects of their work take the back seat. In the war between the operational and strategic tasks, the operational tasks always take the precedence as it is most overbearing on your KRAs. So getting things done is much more important than doing the thing in the best possible way. To get things back in perspective and stay recent, it becomes imperative to have someone from outside to come and take a look at your business from a totally unbiased angle time to time. As the process requires a lot of comparison with the industry standards and competition; it is doubly good if the “unbiased” analyst is someone with worldwide knowledge base and network and has access to competitor actions.

Next time someone asks you for time, think about those “poor” consultants who make a living reading time J

Monday, August 19, 2013

Cash yielding Opinions

It is said that Media is the fourth pillar of democracy. Though an informal pillar, the power of this institution in our lives is felt the most when the other three pillars ie Legislature, Executive and Judiciary loses credibility in the eyes of the people. This is exactly what is happening in our country now. Indian media especially the Jain family controlled papers and channels (ToI, Times Now etc) have metamorphosed from opinion reporters to opinion makers. Till recently their economic daily Economic Times was free from this ethics flexible Jain syndrome. But looks like even ET has caught hold of the disease of manufacturing news.
Today's(19th Aug 2013) ET front page screams of a large number of Indian stocks trading below their book value ie the price of their assets and hence the ET reporter advises his readers to pick and choose these companies whose fundamentals are "strong". Though he mentions fleetingly that one of the reasons why the companies are devalued is the debt they have on books, the article conveniently forgets to mention the effect the debt have on assets and valuations of the company.
To understand more, let us explore the idea of "sitting ducks". A public listed company is classified as a sitting duck if the stock valuation of the company is lesser than the book value ie the total assets of the company. The underlying idea is that if some corporate raider can buy the shares at a lesser value, tear down the firm and then sell off its assets, he can make a killer profit. But the problem here is that a raider can pocket the profits of the sales only after he pays off the debts the company owes. Debt owners have the first right on the company assets followed by preferential share holders and then only can a common shareholders (the ones who buys from stock market) profit. Take for instance, Reliance communication which is presently at Rs 118.75 and the book value is Rs 159.47. The difference is nothing but the huge debt of Rs 35,185 crores loan they are struggling with and to reduce which Mr Anil Ambani is doing exactly what a corporate raider would have done- selling his assets piece by piece. But the fact remains that nobody wants to buy and so he is turning towards his brother for help now.
Now let us look at the issue from a different angle. As a result of this article, almost every stock (with the exception of some really badly effected ones) shot up by 2.5% to 7% today with intra-day figures touching even 10%. Analyse this spurt in the context that the sensex over all fell by 291 point today due to the continuing rupee meltdown. If a person who was privy to this information had invested 1 crore in some of these stocks yesterday, he would have made around 5 lacs in a single day today. So a few might have profited from the brilliant ET analysis. But who lost? To understand that, let us first look at a famous stock market theory.
The Greater fool theory states that stock markets are able to give a return greater than the corporate profits because everyone who trades on stocks behaves like fools. A fool buys stock only because he/she believes that there will be another fool who will be willing to pay more for the same stock. So fools keep selling to each other and the valuation goes up. But in case of an oligocracy like India (sadly we are getting there, the country is ruled by a few powerful people across politics, business, media, bureaucracy etc), we will have to modify the theory a bit. We will have to say that there are two categories of fools here: Powerful fools and really foolish fools ;). The first category runs this country and so knows when to buy and when to sell. They know when the government is going to free import duty on petroleum and when petrochemicals will be curtailed and so we cannot even call them fools. They are able to manufacture the right environment needed to breed a million fools who will buy from them. So all the fools in the second category who read the first page of ET diligently and went to buy the "assets" of PSUs at a deep discount will be the proud owners of these shares for next few months to come.
I guess that was too much of economics and stock market theories, let me close this article on a lighter note. Americans extended the greater fools theory and surmised that if you want to make money in the market, then you need to be a lesser fool. So how will you remain a lesser fool? Simple, by withdrawing from the market when you see too many fools who does not understand anything about stocks around. There were a lot of veteran fools who successfully used this tactic and made money at the expense of bigger fools. Some say even American President Herbert Hoover was one of them. So, the story goes like this. President Hoover was interested in stocks and held a big portfolio and was making good money as the markets were on a upward surge in 1920s. Once, while in a lift, the lift operator started talking to him about the right stocks to invest in. The talk by a commoner with no understanding of stocks rang an alarm bell in Hoover's head. He, being a veteran fool, understood that the market is getting crowded with fools and time has come to sell. He immediately went to his broker and asked him to sell every stock he held. The grand presidential sale hit the headlines and the news spread in no time. When the other investors saw that the US President was selling, they panicked and there was a mad rush to sell stocks. The mad rush resulted in the crash of the NYSE on that Tuesday (October 29) of 1929. The black Tuesday as we know the day today marked the beginning of the Great Depression.....

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Absurdity of "collective conscience"

In April 1959, KM Nanavati, a commander in Indian navy, shot dead his friend for 15 years Prem Ahuja. Ahuja was having an illicit relationship with Nanavati's wife while the commander was away on work. Nanavati surrendered after the act and was trialed by a jury of 9 members of Greater Bombay sessions court. Though it was clear from the beginning that Nanavati had killed Ahuja in cold blood, the commander acquired a hero image during the trial. Thousands used to gather in front of the court when the arguments happened and Nanavati used to be get an arousing welcome with slogans and clapping whenever he arrived at the court. A tabloid Blitz eulogized his act as a loving and wronged husband avenging the wrongs done against his family by a playboy. This version of the story became so popular that Blitz sold for Rs 2 per copy whenever it ran this story while its original price was 25 ps at that time. Rallies happened in Mumbai supporting Nanavati and finally the jury acquitted Nanavati with a 8-1 verdict.The "collective conscience" was obviously for setting Nanavati free (or at least it seemed so) though he committed a murder in cold blood. But 1959 was very different from 2005 and the honorable justice of the sessions court didn't think that the judgement was objective and impartial. He dismissed the jury's verdict and referred the case to the Bombay High court. Subsequently on retrial, the Bombay High court found Nanavati guilty of culpable homicide and sentenced him to life imprisonment; the judgement was upheld by the Supreme court later. Taking Nanavati's case as an example, government of India abolished jury trials stating that jury can get influenced/misled by media and public opinion and hence cannot provide justice without bias.

Fast forward 50 years, today we have an overdose of media and self proclaimed representatives of public doling out their outdated ideas in the name of public opinion. This "opinion" is taken to millions by loud, biased and TRP hungry news readers (or should I call them opinion makers) thus creating and propagating our "collective conscience". They shout and demand answers and provide adrenaline rush which rivals thriller movies or serials (with which basically they compete for viewer's time). The misleading of public opinion was always there but nowadays it has become torpedoing rather than simple biasing. Media can create heroes and make a villian out of the same person in a split second. They beatified the Defense minister Antony when he moved decisively against the corrupt defense deals. He suddenly became the beacon of hope among the corrupt ministers of the government. But when the cancellations came again and again, the saint was slowly brought down to human levels and is now in the process of moving into devilish boundaries.

There are many things our "collective conscience" represent. One of the most detrimental among them to our diverse nation is intolerance. When a unknown religious organisation claimed that Viswaroopam hurts their religious sentiments, every single news channel in the country ran prime time coverage on it. There were discussions and debates about the issue before the movie even released (and hence obviously none of the speakers knew what is really there in the movie). Seeing that one organisation is stealing all limelight, 20 more joined in a matter of days and the controversy blew over in no time. Ever since the Delhi rape case, our "collective conscience" has grown to include intolerance towards anything said against women. Though curiously, Bollywood is kept out of this intolerance category. I guess that may be because if the idea is applied on Bollywood  there will be hardly any movies coming out. With the idea hotting up, an old rape case called Suryanelli case has resurfaced and prominent politicians are finding themselves in the middle of the controversy. I agree that the comments made by justice Basant and Sudhakaran MP were insensitive but what surprises me is the reluctance to even consider the premise that the girl may have been used as a child prostitute when evidence does points to the same. The same aspect was highlighted when news channels made a ball out of the jocund comments made by Vayalar Ravi to a journalist who asked him about Suryanelli case. People who understand malayalam could easily make out that Ravi was trying to put the journalist in a spot for her open ended question but according to a popular news channel, the sexist comment severely traumatized the female journalist.

Though I borrowed the usage "collective conscience" from Afzal Guru verdict, I didn't write anything about the verdict itself because a lot have been already written and analysed about the same. Personally, I don't believe the true culprits of parliament case has been booked under law and lot of questions remain unanswered but as per the collective conscience of the nation, the culprit has been punished.

Saturday, December 08, 2012

Piecemeal Reforms

"For want of a nail the shoe was lost.
For want of a shoe the horse was lost.
For want of a horse the rider was lost.
For want of a rider the message was lost.
For want of a message the battle was lost.
For want of a battle the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail"        
                                                                            -Benjamin Franklin

This adage speaks about how due to lack of attention to little things, disasters happen. This is also the story of Indian Reforms 2.0, the ones which were undertaken by a PM who as FM executed the opening up of Indian economy.
Let us look at how it all began in the 2nd innings. NDA before moving out enacted a bill to restructure the collapsing power sector of India called The Electricity Act 2003. When UPA got elected in 2004, the new PM understood that Indian Power sector needs a massive restructuring and in turn huge investments. This was made a priority in 11th five year plan and a target of 78000 MW of additional capacity was targeted. In a country where 8 hours load shedding is a norm even in mega cities like Gurgaon and Noida, power sector reform indeed is the need of the hour and the targeted capacity addition was estimated to take $164 billion of investment, $78 billion in generation and remaining in transmission. For a government with $194 billion revenues in 2011, it was obvious that the mega target cannot be achieved without the help of the private sector. So government opened up the electricity generation to private sector and the media chorused the "reform" as one which will change the country for good. The move also captured the fancy of the private sector which invested in a big way. Tata Power, Essar Group, Reliance Power bid and won contracts for establishing Ultra Mega Power Projects (UMPP) in various states. The plan looked simple. The private sector will generate power using the coal and gas provided by state owned monopolies like Coal India, GAIL, ONGC etc. The private companies will be given land by the state government to set up the plant and they will also be allowed to hold captive mines for fuel to generate electricity. The pvt players will then sell the power to the utility companies owned by the respective state government at the cost for which they won the bids. For instance, Tata Power won the bid to establish a UMPP at Mundra at Gujarat where it will generate power from coal (in this case, coal was imported from Tata's captive mines in Indonesia) and sell it to state government at Rs 2.20. The plan looked flawless and everyone seemed to be happy. But once tried to execute it, all hell broke loose. To start with, state governments took forever to do land acquisition and give the clearances for the project. Clearly, the state governments did not share the enthusiasm of the center to reform power. Next was the environmental ministry, which initially delayed the clearance for mining especially near the ecologically fragile zones. The usually subdued ministry suddenly became belligerent under Jairam Ramesh who in one instance blocked the approval of a project which he had pushed hard as the minister of state for power a few months ago. Again, ministries under the government failed to see the bigger picture and kept squabbling.
Next came the bigger problem, getting the fuel. While generation was simplified, the process of getting fuel was still under the monopoly of few players who were caught napping when ambitious plans were laid. For generating, 78000 MW, Coal India, ONGC and GAIL will have to tap the resources at a comparable rate. Something they were never able to do. The government attempted to speed up this part by allowing private players to do tap natural gas and Reliance won the KG basin contract. Unfortunately, Reliance ended up doing everything else other than tapping the gas from the basin and the output was pretty much like public sector. Government also allocated coal mines to these power generation companies and private players to work around the lethargy of public sector players. But this allocation went grievously wrong and supreme court stepped in to get the mines de-allocated as most of them were allocated to relatives of politicians. The scandal which became famous as Coalgate dried up the fuel lines of power plants in India. There were many more issues and players which came into play like the supreme court putting a full ban on coal mining in many areas due to illegal mining and encroachment into ecologically fragile zones. For the time being, let's ignore it and just understand that as a result, the power generation companies ended up with little fuel or no fuel and ended up running their plants at a capacities as low as 20%. This "precious power" which they generated after everything was "sold" to state electricity boards. Now SEB (electricity boards of state governments) which is responsible for transmission of power are treated like their personal possession by politicians. As electricity is a highly subsidized and politicized utility in India, the burden of all the free power doled out by state government is taken by the utterly loss making P&Ls of these companies. The companies were never used to paying for the power they got and hence in most cases did not pay the private companies for the power they "bought".
Basically what happened was, a piece meal reform. The reform which was undertaken to clean the power sector was executed badly with no support from state governments or its machinery. The Electricity Act 2003 clearly asks the state governments to convert the state electricity boards as individual transmission companies responsible for their revenue and expenses and hence reform the transmission part of the system. Even with multiple deadlines, this was ignored by the state governments and the so called reforms only happened in the power generation sector.
The story of piece meal reform continued on to FDI in retail this week when Indian parliaments opened up FDI in retail in 18 cities of India (if we take the number of cities which satisfy the conditions required to be satisfied to set up stores in the states which are going to allow FDI). We allowed FDI after seeing the experience of our neighbor. China allowed FDI in retail in 1992 and saw huge investment coming to the country, mostly in the form of MNCs setting up manufacturing facilities or giving contracts to Chinese manufacturers to make products for them. It helped a lot that China had a developing manufacturing sector which could seamlessly take these orders and in a few years develop into a global hub for all such orders. China's and later Indonesia's experience with FDI in retail also showed that Asian habits creates an Eco system where both large and small retailers can co-exist. The essence of this phenomenon is our eating habits. We like to eat fresh and hot food as against canned food. As a result, we generally shop at 2 levels- first in the beginning of the month for all basic supplies at a big retail center in the city and second daily for perishable items like milk, vegetables etc at a small retail shop in our neighborhood. Data shows the number of small shop owners have actually increased in China and Indonesia in last 10 years. So I don't buy the argument of Walmart killing all the Mom & Pop stores but like the Electricity Act, it is also a piece meal reform due to 2 key areas which are still not reformed. First one is our manufacturing structure which is in a bad shape thanks to our RBI governor's obsession with inflation and our poor power sector (yes its all bloody connected). The second one, something which even Mr Arun Jaitley carefully side stepped (I liked his "Indian sales boy and girls of US stores selling Chinese goods" which majorly touches the manufacturing problem) is that of Indian agricultural produce marketing laws. A vast majority of states governments in India don't allow retailers to buy directly from farmers. Instead they have to buy the produce from designated mandis or village wholesale markets from middle men who get the produce from farmers at very low rates due to their monopoly in the field. With these laws prevailing, middle men will continue to thrive. With Walmart and Tesco in, they will make more money with increased number of buyers. So the fundamental problem of farmers not getting enough compensation is not going to change. FDI in retail is just another case of piece meal reform and I don't expect anything to change with this so called reform.
That leaves you to think, then why did the government work so hard to get it passed. FDI in retail is a signal to the stagnant investors to kick start the investments because now the government has undergone a metamorphosis. It has got rid of a belligerent TMC and it's random leader and have got a duo of opponents from UP supporting it with the same old reasoning - protect secularism (read keep BJP out). It was the same trick for which the top corporate houses of India fell for when the government parted ways with the Left on atomic deal. Seeing the "commitment" of the government for getting country's power problem solved, private sector put forth bids in large number and won contracts for power plants expecting the government to show the same commitment in getting the entire power supply chain reformed. We have already seen how the hope got bellied against partisan interests of petty politicians all over the country. Will the investors, both domestic and foreign fall for the signal again this time, only time will show?