Wednesday, March 18, 2009

RATAN TATA


IIPM Admission Detail

I don’t know if this humble missive will reach 10, Janpath or if Sonia Madam will even read it. But I hereby nominate you for the next Bharat Ratna for your pioneering efforts to save corporate India. Your efforts are so refreshingly different from the controversial actions of Vijay Mallya and Naresh Goyal, who have acquired a nasty habit of going hat in hand to the government. After announcing global conquests a la Vasco da Gama through Kingfisher and Jet, the duo have now hunkered down and want a series of bail outs from both the government and the consumer. (As a frequent flyer, you might have heard of how consumers are bailing out Mallya and Goyal by paying through their noses for air tickets). You are also so refreshingly different from the likes of Rahul Bajaj who claims to bat for India Inc. by allegedly asking for more protection from foreign competition.

Mighty sir, I also want to apologise for words written two years ago in the sister publication Business & Economy. At that time, I had the temerity to suggest that the Tata Steel takeover of Corus (hailed by many in the media as the reverse of East India Company) will saddle your company with unmanageable debt. The temerity transformed into untrammeled insolence when this humble hack suggested that the double whammy of a falling rupee and falling demand and profitability for steel could lead Tata Steel to an unprecedented crisis. When you took over Corus, the rupee was about 40 to a dollar. Now, it is about 50 to a dollar.

So the $6 billion odd loan that you took for the Corus takeover seems an even steeper mountain to climb now. Of course, your letter to the Prime Minister has nothing to do with this niggling doubt about the future of Tata Steel. It has also nothing to do with fears that foreign institutions might recall loans. The letter is purely selfless. And really, how does it matter that the debt-equity ratio of Tata Steel increased from 1:1 in 2006 to 2.74:1? Only the cynics will say that a mighty entrepreneur like you will worry about these trivial matters when you are on a noble mission to save India Inc. And I will be the last one to suggest that P. Chidambaram imposing a 5% duty on steel imports to protect domestic players from global dumping as steel prices crash has anything to do with the future of Tata Steel.

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Source : IIPM Editorial, 2008

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

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