They were famed for their jet-set lifestyles and the names of their companies were emblazoned on airplanes, Formula One cars and the shirtfronts of cricket teams.
However, now the debt-laden empires of three of India’s best-known tycoons — Vijay Mallya, Subrata Roy and T. Venkattram Reddy — are crumbling before their eyes, downfalls that observers say stem from a climate of weak regulation and deference to conspicuous wealth.
“All too often, the banks are dazzled by the halo of personal fortunes,” said Vishwas Utagi, a veteran campaigner for banking regulation.
Photo: AFP
Some of India’s most successful businesses, such as the family-run Tata and Reliance conglomerates, have been led for years by men with little appetite for publicity and who prefer to operate in the shadows.
However, Kingfisher boss Mallya and Sahara supremo Roy came to epitomize a new breed of tycoon, unafraid of trumpeting their achievements when they started making a name for themselves in the early 2000s.
Mallya — the self-styled “King of Good Times” — became something of an icon as he turned the United Breweries Group which he inherited from his father into one of the world’s largest spirit makers.
As his core business flourished, Mallya branched out by launching the Kingfisher airline, named after his company’s best-known beer.
His profile rose further when he acquired a stake in the Force India F1 team and ownership of the Royal Challengers Bangalore cricket team.
However, as the Indian economy began to slow sharply at the turn of the decade, with the aviation industry becoming one of the sectors to be worst hit, Mallya’s fortunes nosedived too.
After selling the liquor business to Diageo in a bid to shore up his airline, Mallya looked on helplessly as Kingfisher continued to haemorrhage cash.
The airline never took to the skies again after a pilots’ strike over unpaid wages in 2012.
Having run out of patience over Mallya’s failure to clear debts, said to be in excess of US$60 million, the United Bank of India this month declared him a “wilful defaulter,” making it nigh impossible to access fresh loans.
While Mallya is fighting to keep his properties from creditors, Roy is trying to sell his portfolio of luxury hotels — including New York’s Plaza Hotel and the Grosvenor House in London — to raise the US$1.6 billion he needs to secure bail from Delhi’s Tihar Prison.
While he has several media interests, including a Hindi TV channel and newspaper, Roy’s profile was heightened by his co-ownership with Mallya of Force India and involvement in cricket.
As well as sponsoring the national side, Sahara set up a Pune-based franchise to enter the glitzy Indian Premier League (IPL).
The team’s expulsion from the competition at the end of last year’s tournament in a dispute over finances hinted that all was not well.
Things dramatically worsened in March when Roy was detained after failing to meet a demand by regulators to pay back millions of small savers the US$3.2 billion that Sahara raised via an illegal bond scheme.
While Roy owns homes modeled on the White House and Buckingham Palace, Reddy’s penchant is for luxury cars, with a fleet that reportedly included a Rolls Royce Phantom.
He also could not resist the glamor of the IPL, buying the Deccan Chargers franchise before it went bust in 2012.
While Roy’s fortune was self-made, Reddy and his brother T. Vinayak Ravi Reddy inherited ownership of the Deccan Chronicle from their father.
The Hyderabad newspaper’s prestige enabled them to draw loans for riskier ventures including a chain of bookstores and a chartered jet company.
Even if the cricket team is no longer sucking money, the Reddys are struggling to keep the wolf from the door and lenders have already seized several of their properties.
Tamal Bandyopadhyay, author of a book on Sahara, said a weak regulatory framework enabled tycoons to build up debts that should never have been allowed.
“Mallya is a case of over-stretching and over-leveraging, while Roy is the case of exploiting regulatory arbitrage or the loopholes in regulation,” Bandyopadhyay said.
Utagi, a retired bank worker who is vice president of the All India Bank Employees’ Association, said there were too many “pliable people” in the industry who face little comeback if money they lend is not repaid.
“When it comes to credit appraisals for corporates, the rules are more often honored in the breach than the observance,” he said.
Bandyopadhyay said the ambitions of Indian tycoons were rarely held in check as they were “surrounded by sycophants.”
“That makes it very difficult for them to stay in touch with reality,” he added.
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