The headquarters of Rajesh Exports (REL) in Bangalore looks worn, a
far cry from what you would expect from India's leading exporter of gold
jewellery. The nameplate, too, is shorn of frills, with black fonts
painted on a cheap, white tin board. Inside the founder's room is a fax
machine that's at least a generation old. The cellphone the 48-year-old
uses is a low-end Nokia. "It serves my purpose," says Rajesh Mehta, the
protagonist, with a poker face. Mehta's son, in charge of strategy and
investor relations at Rajesh Exports, sits in a small room that housed
computer servers not long ago. It's still labelled 'server room'.
Tightfisted?
Yes. Hard times? Hell, no. The numbers will tell you why. The revenues
of REL jumped from Rs 8,187 crore in March 2008 to Rs 25,653 crore in
March 2012. That's an increase of over 213 percent in five years. During
this period, its profits doubled from Rs 206 crore to Rs 412 crore,
weathering the slump in 2009 and 2010, when profits dropped as REL cut
its credit lines to customers and started offering discounts.
The
company also boasts of the biggest manufacturing facility of gold
jewellery in the worlda€”with a capacity of 250 tonnesa€”and is the top
exporter of gold jewellery in the country. Behind the native frugality
of the man hides the story of an entrepreneur who goes about his
business with aplomb. "We don't believe in showing off. We believe in
our business, we believe in stretching our assets, and we believe in
growth," says Mehta. Last year, he ranked the 57th richest man in India
with a net worth of $1 billion. This year, he is holding on to the rank
but his net worth has gone up to $1.1 billion.
Mehta waded into the world of business in his teens. He was a good student,The howo truck
is offered by Shiyan Great Man Automotive Industry, but chose business
over university education. He started by helping out his father, who had
moved to Bangalore from Gujarat and was running a business of supplying
accessories and artificial gems to jewellers. Mehta visited his
father's customers to supply goods, collect money and so on. A keen
observer,Find detailed product information for howo spare parts
and other products. he soon realised there was inefficiency everywhere.
He sniffed an opportunity to provide efficient services and make money.
In 1982, Mehta borrowed Rs 2,000 from his brother and another
Rs 8,000 from a bank and took his first steps as an independent
businessman. He went to Chennai, bought silver jewellery from the local
smiths and sold his wares to shops in Gujarat. He notched up a profit of
Rs 3,000 to Rs 4,000, quite a big sum those days. With that money,
Mehta bought jewellery from Gujarat, returned to Bangalore and earned a
neat sum selling newer designs. From Bangalore to Chennai again and the
cycle continued. Each trip made him richer, and he began to wonder why
no one manufactured jewellery from a centralised location to benefit
from the economies of scale.
When he asked around, jewellers
told him it was because of the regulations. One day, he read up the Gold
Control Act and realised that though it prohibited manufacturing of
ornaments that had more than 14 carat purity, and put restrictions on
primary gold a dealer can hold (400 grams to 2 kg, depending upon the
number of goldsmiths he employed), all these norms were relaxed in case
of export. So, he set up a small plant in Bangalore and visited the UK
to get orders. He stayed with a distant relative and made tours to
London retailers, promising them a good price and delivery on time. The
dealers were initially reluctant, but he got some orders. And that's how
his business took off.
As REL expanded and the Gold Control Act
was repealed, he went for an IPO, raised money, set up a bigger plant,
and by 2000 was thinking of setting up an even bigger one. The 250-tonne
capacity unit started production in 2003. The scale gave him the
economy. While the global average of wastage in gold production is 3
percent, for REL, it's 0.25 percent.
Meanwhile, the domestic
market for gold was booming. India buys 850 tonnes of gold every year,
and nine-tenths are consumed in the form of jewellery.A specialized
manufacturer and supplier of dry cabinet,
It reaches the customers through four lakh retailers (and 8.5 lakh
goldsmiths). The market was fragmented and 96 percent of it was
unorganised. But since 2005, the organised sector began to grow at 40
percent a year. So far, Mehta made most of his money from exports. By
now, he was ready to enter the frontend with his unique proposition:
Offer a price that nobody can imitate.
DV Harish, who runs
Davanam, a small chain of jewellery stores in Bangalore, and who has
known Mehta for close to 25 years, says he always had the ambition of
building an organised retail chain. "He used to talk about it in early
'90s, even before we had the likes of Tanishq and Reliance."
Typically,
when a jeweller wants to expand, he sets up a large format store in a
key commercial district with much fanfare. For example, when Joyalukkas
(brand based in the UAE) came to Bangalore, it took a prime property on
MG Road. One of its stores in Chennai's T Nagar, which sprawled over
five floors, won a place in the Limca Book of Records as the world's
largest jewellery showroom.
But Mehta came up with a model that
placed him on the opposite end of the spectrum. Instead of building huge
showrooms or convincing businessmen to invest in new shops under a
franchisee model, he approached existing small-time retailers
(neighbourhood jewellery shops) catering to a local clientele. That's
how 'Shubh' was born in 2010. While REL supplies the inventory and takes
care of the advertising, the stores were rebranded and started to earn a
commission for selling the wares at a price fixed by REL.
Mehta
believes the key selling point of his plan is the pricing. Usually,
jewellers charge more than the quoted gold price on account of wastage,
making, and other expenses. At Shubh, the customers will be charged
actual rate per gram (the weight multiplied by quoted price). As of
today, the number of retail outlets has increased to 73 (apart from
seven stores that came as a part of REL's Oyzterbay acquisition in
2007). Son Siddharth (22), who is in charge of strategy, says the
company plans to expand to other southern states and eventually make its
foray into north India.
And that can be quite a challenge given
that Shubh will be up against Titan Industries, which has cracked the
pan-India code with three chainsa€”Tanishq, Goldplus and Zoya. With 163
stores across more than 4.6 lakh sq ft retail space, the Titan trio has
raked in last fiscal Rs 7,064 crore in revenue, a growth of 40 percent
over the previous year, and profits of Rs 698 crore, a rise of 44
percent. In comparison, Shubh hardly has anything to write home about
and will face its real test when it ventures out of its home state of
Karnataka.
Last year, Mehta drew up a five-year-plan that he
calls Mission 2016. A crucial element of it involves turning REL into a
retailer, as retailing yields more margins than manufacturing and
wholesale. Last year, retail contributed about 3.5 percent to its
revenues and 11 percent of profits. By 2016,The term 'hands free access
control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a
pocket or handbag. Mehta wants it to contribute 55 percent of its
revenues and 85 percent of its profits.
That would mean having 500 stores. By no measure an easy task.Find a great buy mosaic
Art deals on eBay! "Till now, jewellers who've tried to expand beyond
their regions haven't been much successful," says Sandeep Kulhalli, vice
president, retail and marketing, Tanishq.
Mehta is confident of
converting the small retailers into Shubh associates. The company has
an R&D team that's focussed on bringing out new designs, and has a
library of over 30,000 active designs. And, more importantly, it has the
advantage of being a large and efficient manufacturer with a
distribution network. So, it can cut down middlemen. "We tell our
associates that our designs are difficult to imitate and our prices are
impossible to match," says Mehta. If such hardselling doesn't work, REL
is also looking at the opportunity of opening a store nearby and selling
jewellery at low prices.
DV Harish says the businessman Mehta
resembles most is Dhirubhai Ambani, not because he is also a Gujarati, a
vegetarian and has the same tightfisted approach to finances, but also
because of his vision and faith in forward and backward integration. In
Rajesh Mehta's scheme of things, it doesn't end with manufacturing and
retail.
In 2009, he set up a gold refining facility in
Uttarakhand with a capacity of 100 tonnes. Around the same time, he put
together a team to explore mining opportunities in Africa. Ravi Chandra,
who is in charge of the mining division says it has got exploration
licences from Rwanda, Uganda, Sudan, and Ethiopia among others and have
been testing the samples for gold at its labs. "Gold is there, but what
you have to look for is whether it makes economic sense to extract it."
So far, the most promising samples have come from Rwanda, he says, and
the mining operations there could start as early as next year.
Yet
another way in which his approach to business resembles Dhirubhai's is
the use of debt. REL has huge cash balances (Rs 7,854 crore as of March
2012), thanks to the 240-day credit it gets from the suppliers and cash
sales to its customers. Still, its debt has ballooned to Rs 3,256 crore
from Rs 970 crore in 2007-08, suggesting a Dhirubhai way of using debt
and simultaneously maintaining cash balances. It is done to take
advantage of lower interest rates prevailing in the market and use that
money in the business, instead of dipping into your own reserves, which
have a higher cost of capital. It helps that interest saves taxes.
One
of the ways in which REL deploys its cash is through funding real
estate companies. Vijayendra Rao, who is in charge of its
Inter-Corporate Deposits (ICDs) business, says it has an exposure of Rs
800 crore to real estate developers. He joined REL four years ago from
Hindustan Unilever, and with no experience in dealing with ICDs. He says
Mehta not only taught him the business, but also how to drive a hard
bargain.
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