was oblivious to that. |
He was excited about uploading tens of hundreds of such fingerprints "" six from each person "" for the National Skills Registry, earning a service fee in the process. The registry is a Nasscom-backed database aimed at giving confidence to international companies outsourcing to India who can know the employee. |
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That is the latest service that Agarwal's decade-old Alankit group, which began as a registrar and share transfer agent, has added to its portfolio. |
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Through 10-odd subsidiary companies "" "it was a regulatory requirement" "" Agarwal offers trading facilities for equities in the cash and futures market (BSE, NSE) and commodities (NCDEX, MCX), works as an insurance broker, processes cash-less hospitalisation claims as a third party administrator(TPA), has a facilitation centre for TIN (tax information network), is licensed to work as an e-return intermediary and also to offer portfolio management and investment advisory services, on a business model which has similarities with peers like Karvy, Motilal Oswal and Geojit. |
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Alankit has also gone international, having bought membership of the seven-month old Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange "" "capital account convertibility (free exchange of currencies) will come in soon and I want to be ready" "" where Agarwal has been back-patted for being among the most active trading members. |
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It seems an unrelated business, but he tells me that retailing medicine "" they have one store so far "" is a "natural progression" for Alankit since such retail is also a service-led business. |
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A chartered accountant by profession, and from a family of professionals, he invested his all "" Rs 1 crore in 1995 "" to get into the service business because he knew it would expand. Today, with his debt-free group clocking revenues of Rs 40 crore, he talks about establishing a pan-Indian presence. That would require serious capital "" about Rs 20-25 lakh per office (same as each Cafe Coffee outlet). |
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"Venture capital perhaps?" |
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"No. They will not give me the deserved valuation," says the street-smart businessman. |
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"Is this the time to expand, given the dull sentiment?" |
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"I always try to enter a business in the dull phase. You can then establish yourself and reap the rewards in the boom phase," he says, mumbling something about an IPO. |
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Ten years. Ten companies. An eponymous building, Alankit House, in the heart of Delhi. And an IPO somewhere on the horizon. Not bad at all for a first-generation entrepreneur who claims to have no godfather, and no aversion to fingerprints. |
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