irb infrastructure owner | virendra mahiskar

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The Road Ahead for Virendra Mhaiskar and IRB India IRB Infrastructure Owner Mr. Virendra Mhaiskar (Chairman and Managing Director) Linkdin profile: https://in.linkedin.com/in/irb-infrastruct ure-owner-virendra-mhaiskar-203414136

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Page 1: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

The Road Ahead for Virendra Mhaiskar and IRB India

IRB Infrastructure Owner Mr. Virendra Mhaiskar

(Chairman and Managing Director)Linkdin profile:

https://in.linkedin.com/in/irb-infrastructure-owner-virendra-mhaiskar-203414136

Page 2: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Virendra Mhaiskar has made IRB India’s largest and most profitable toll-road operator. In a sector that has most companies reeling under debt, he seems to be the rare animal with enough cash on hand

Name:  Virendra Mhaiskar

Age:  41

Profile:  Chairman and managing director, IRB Infrastructure

IRB Infrastructure Owner

Page 3: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Rank in Rich List 2012: 96

Net Worth:  $560 mln

The Big Hairy Challenge faced in the last one year:  Slowdown in the infrastructure business, public protests against toll payments, and allegations of political links

The Way Forward:  Focusing on project execution, particularly on the Ahmedabad-Vadodara BOT project

Page 4: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Virendra Mhaiskar must be incredibly crazy. There is nothing else that explains the kind of risks the 41-year-old chairman and managing director of IRB Infrastructure takes, and his rise as India’s largest and most profitable toll-road operator. He deals with problems of the kind that could drive most people around the bend.

Page 5: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Consider, for instance, the episode this July when the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS), one of Maharashtra’s most raucous political parties, thought up an idea: Galvanise supporters to go past toll booths across the state without paying to use the roads. Egged on by exhortations made by their leader Raj Thackeray, they complied, and men tolling the booths could do nothing. Thackeray claimed it was to protest against the obscene profits the “toll mafia” was raking in from the dense traffic that used these roads.

Page 6: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Toll booth staff manning the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, the crown jewel in IRB Infrastructure’s portfolio, came in for special treatment. (The company is responsible for its upkeep until 2019.) Ironically, Mhaiskar says, “Raj is a friend at a personal level.” But that said, he argues, “To those who say traffic has grown more than projected, I ask, what if it had been otherwise? Would we get our money back?”

Page 7: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

I ask if he has tried explaining this to Mr Thackeray and how they continue to be friends. “Enforcing agreements signed with developers, and explaining the rationale to stakeholders is the government’s job,’’ he says, as a matter of fact.

Page 8: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

I can’t help but think it ironical. But I guess there is a method to the irony. How else could he have grown the company into India’s largest in the sector, and manage 12 roads across west and south India?

So, I probe him a bit deeper. “The government’s policy on road construction and toll through the build-operate-transfer (BOT) model has been the most successful and transparent of all public-private partnerships in the country. But it is also the most poorly understood,” he says.

Page 9: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

The problem, Mhaiskar says, is no politician or bureaucrat has bothered to explain to the public how it works. By way of explanation, he offers an analogy.

Page 10: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

“If you borrow Rs 70 lakh to buy a home, and agree to repay it over 15 years, you return several times the amount to the bank by the end of the tenure, and nobody complains. Going by that same logic, how can you argue if a road developer has invested Rs 1,500 crore [over 20 years], returns ought to be limited to the original investment? What about our borrowing cost, maintenance costs and our returns?”

Page 11: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

That is why, he says, public anger manufactured against toll-road operators by politicians have badly impacted investors in the business. Caught between policy changes and the unwillingness (or inability) of users to pay, they are stuck with millions of dollars in debt.

Page 12: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

For instance, he’s still trying to extricate himself from a situation in Kolhapur, where IRB won a 30-year contract in 2008 to maintain all of the city’s inner roads. Back then, it was hailed as a pilot project that would lead the way for municipalities across the country to liberate themselves from the responsibility of maintaining roads. People in the city, though, simply refused to pay, and earlier, in January, they organised rallies to protest against the tolls. Collections had to be stopped after the state government thought the protests impossible to ignore. All attempts to find a solution continue to hang in abeyance.

Page 13: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

Problems like these find participants in the Indian infrastructure business under huge amounts of debt, and are compelling many to get out of the projects they had bid for.

Mhaiskar, though, seems the rare animal with enough cash on  hand. His revenues almost doubled from Rs 1,753 crore in 2009-10 to Rs 3,255 crore in 2011-12.

His profit margins are a little over 15 percent. And, early in October, he signed on to buy out MVR Infra’s road project in Andhra Pradesh for an undisclosed amount.

Page 14: IRB Infrastructure Owner | Virendra Mahiskar

“A lot of such projects are now on sale, mostly by promoters under stress. We are looking at those that can give us an internal rate of return [IRR] of at least 20 percent,” Mhaiskar says.