Tuesday, October 20, 2015

ET AWARD BUSINESS LEADER SPECIAL.................. Pulling off Big Feats by Stickingto the Basics


Pulling off Big Feats 
by Sticking
to the Basics


...and the award goes to
BUSINESS LEADER UDAY KOTAK Executive Vice-chairman,
Kotak Mahindra Bank

Uday Kotakperformeda Herculean task last year -convincing the stodgy
Reserve Bank of India that amalgamation of two healthy banks also
makes sense, and not just regulator-blessed shotgun marriages of banks
in distress with healthy ones, which was the norm.
That's why he is ET Business Leader of the Year. Kotak, in his lifetime
as an entrepreneur, has achieved a lot -from advising industrialists like
Adi Godrej and Analjit Singh on takeovers that grew businesses to
safeguarding his baby from many a financial storm. But the $2.4 billion
acquisition of ING Vysya may well be the brightest jewel in his crown,
which many others had also eyed.
“I was delighted to receive the mail (about the award),“ said Kotak.
“It is a great feeling, especially coming from a high-quality jury .
I am delighted and honoured. I just feel that it is a significant responsibility .
It is also about the responsibility to be an ambassador.
The whole ING Vysya deal was to build capacity to serve India.
India is at a crucial juncture. A lot of things in India are getting right.
It is a marathon.“
Most are likely to agree that banking has been the most difficult business
in this country for the past few years. Several banks, both private and
state-run, have piled up huge amounts of bad loans due to defaults.
But Kotak Mahindra Bank has been trouble-free. Not that Kotak had a
magic wand but he had the common sense to not lend to businesses
where entrepreneurs did not have their skin in the game, and resisted
the temptation to make a quick buck.Restructured loans were at 0.24%
of advances, and net bad loans were at 0.92% last fiscal year, when the
combined figure for the in dustry was more than 10%. The icing on the
cake was that there was no debt restructuring and sale of non-performing
assets to reconstruction companies. Not many can boast of such a balance
sheet in the industry.
Ten years ago, when the Reserve Bank permitted the non-banking
finance company to become a bank, several critics thought it would
fail to make the transformation and compete with the likes of HDFC
Bank and ICICI Bank. Kotak, however, proved them wrong.
Long before many realised that the days of exotic finance were over,
he figured out that he needed to stick to the fundamentals that underpinned
the brick-and mortar model of banking while wholeheartedly embracing
technology.
RBI governor Raghuram Rajan may be giving signals that some of the
numbers from the banking industry may be suspect because of accounting
practices, but Kotak has shunned even the regulator-permitted accounting
changes that glossed over stress. His bank set high standards for disclosures.
Even when the Reserve Bank of India permitted banks to transfer bonds to
the held-to-maturity category to avoid mark-to-market losses,
Kotak Mahindra did not do so and sacrificed an opportunity to boost
net profit by around `167 crore.
It was the first bank to disclose its entire exposure to currency derivatives
when the 2008 credit crisis resulted in many reneging on contracts.
No wonder investors have always paid a premium to own Kotak Mahindra Bank.

 ET19OCT15 

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