By staying alert to investment opportunities and betting on long-term potential, Ajay Piramal has built a diversified empire of successful businesses
Ajay Piramal, chairman of Piramal Group, invariably chooses the path less travelled
Image: Joshua Navalkar
Ajay Piramal, chairman of the well-diversified, $3.2 billion Piramal Group, has been navigating the world of big business for over three decades now and, despite the length of his journey, he has managed to avoid any serious misstep. Reason: Even while taking decisions relating to investments, he has kept the values and the approach of trusteeship at the core—be it in financial services and health care under the holding and flagship company Piramal Enterprises Ltd (PEL), real estate development through Piramal Realty or philanthropic activity through the Piramal Foundation.
Of course, his biggest windfalls are the result of contrarian calls: For instance, entering the pharmaceuticals space in 1988 by acquiring Australian multinational Nicholas Laboratories when others stayed clear of the field. Then, selling Piramal Healthcare’s branded generic drugs business for $3.72 billion to Abbott Laboratories in 2010, when multinationals like Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline Plc were eyeing a bigger share of the Indian market.
Piramal, thereafter, struck it big by investing in Vodafone, at a time when the telecom sector was plagued by intense competition and low tariffs. Flush with funds from the Abbott deal, PEL picked up a near 11 percent stake in Vodafone’s Indian arm for over Rs 5,800 crore and exited in 2014 with a roughly 52 percent gain.
He continues to eye growth opportunities in other sectors. PEL, which operates three main lines of businesses (financial services, health care and information management), is involved in wholesale lending to real estate projects across major cities, at a time when others have shied away due to a sluggish growth trajectory. Between May 2013 and June 2014, Piramal’s PEL picked up stakes in three companies of the Chennai-headquartered financial services conglomerate Shriram Group; he also became chairman of the group in 2015.
“We always go on the path less travelled,” Ajay Piramal, 61, tells Forbes India in an interview at the Piramal Group’s corporate headquarters at Peninsula Corporate Park in Mumbai’s Lower Parel.
And traversing that path has paid off. His flagship company PEL’s revenues have risen at 29 percent CAGR over the past four years to Rs 6,610 crore for the year ended March 31, 2016; net profit went up at 71 percent CAGR in the same period to touch Rs 951 crore in FY2016. For the quarter ended June 30, 2016, PEL reported a 36 percent year-on-year rise in net profit to Rs 231 crore and a 27 percent increase in revenues, which stood at Rs 1,776 crore.
Investors have taken note and the Piramal Enterprises stock has jumped over four-fold from Rs 463.5 on September 30, 2012 to Rs 1,836.15 on the same day in 2016, taking its market cap on BSE to Rs 31,685 crore.
Not surprisingly, Piramal is the second highest gainer by both wealth and rank in the 2016 Forbes India Rich List. His wealth has risen over 82 percent to $3.25 billion from $1.78 billion in 2015, while his rank has jumped 27 places to 35, from 62 earlier.
This success is proof, if any was needed, of Piramal’s strong business acumen, one that has spurred a regular reinvention at Piramal Group.
(This story appears in the 10 November, 2016 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)