Acquiring Maytas Infrastructure could be Ravi Parthasarthy's chance to show his organisation's ability to think big.
That Ravi Parthasarathy managed to persuade the government to hand over the company, despite some reported initial unwillingness, speaks volumes for his negotiating skills. But then, the 57 year-old chairman of IL&FS is known for his ability to swing deals. That was amply demonstrated in March 2008, when IL&FS let go of its broking subsidiary for some $260 million. At Rs 275 a share, the deal was closed at what was probably the peak of the market.
Deal-making is only one of Parthasarathy’s skills. An alumnus of IIM Ahmedabad, former Citibanker and co-founder of one of India’s best-known finance firm 20th Century Finance, he has also taught his team to earn handsome returns when it comes to implementing projects. In one road development project in Tamil Nadu, for instance, the state government and an investment agency contributed Rs 44 crore and earned just Rs 2 lakh in seven years. IL&FS managed to structure the deal so astutely that it contributed Rs 69.6 crore and earned Rs 91.3 crore in the same time. For the Noida toll bridge, IL&FS set the basis for calculating returns at 20 per cent a year on the project cost, rather than on the equity. That left the infrastructure financer with far higher returns than it might have earned otherwise.
Despite a fair measure of success in road development across the country, however, IL&FS hasn’t risen to greater heights, posting an income from operations of just Rs 660 crore last year lower than the Rs 772 crore reported in 2007-08.
Set up in 1986, it actually got into the act somewhere in 1993. Parthasarthy, who has steered the organisation from its early days, must have been disappointed that the government felt the need to set up another financial intermediary for infrastructure investment in IDFC, which started out sometime in August 1997.
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It shouldn’t have been too difficult for IL&FS to have taken on the additional mandate and scaled up operations. At one time IL&FS did reportedly toy with the idea of an IPO but hasn’t got round to doing it yet, for unspecified reasons. IDFC, on the other hand, managed to list itself in August, 2005. ILFS’ bigger shareholders — Life Insurance Corporation (26 per cent) and Orix Corporation of Japan (23 per cent) — seem to have no complaints, however. For Parthasarathy, it’s not just a case of recovering the money. The company, which suffered collateral damage from Raju’s confession to fraud in Satyam, could just be Parthasarathy’s opportunity to answer criticism that IL&FS hasn’t lived up to its potential.
Maytas, which has some projects, could be IL&FS’s ticket into the bigger league. For Parthasarathy, a voracious reader, who doesn’t miss a single edition of the Financial Times and a fitness fanatic, it’s a question of making something of the company with the team he has built. A beautiful office in the eastern suburb of Mumbai would be a good setting for him to prove his critics wrong.