By Jun 4, 2014
-
Qimat Rai Gupta became a billionaire
as shares of Havells India Ltd. (HAVL), the nation’s largest electrical
parts maker by market value, surged to a record.
Gupta, 77, and his family control almost 62 percent of the company, according to exchange filings, a stake valued at $1.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Anil Sharma, a spokesman for Havells, confirmed the family stake in the company based in Noida, near New Delhi.
The maker of lighting products, cables and fans has benefited from rising incomes in the world’s second-most populous nation as consumers shift to branded products, Firstcall Research said in a June 3 report. Havells owns Sylvania, a European maker of Lumiance lighting products.
“They have shown steady and quality performance in terms of growth and earnings,” said Gautam Chhaochharia, head of research at UBS Securities India Pvt. in Mumbai, who has a buy recommendation on the Havells. “That’s given investors confidence in the stock.”
The stock rose for a fifth day, advancing 1.1 percent to a record 1,067.55 rupee at the close in Mumbai yesterday. The shares have surged 35 percent this year, twice the gain for the S&P BSE Sensex (SENSEX) benchmark gauge.
Gupta, who’s the chairman of Havells, controls the fortune along with his family, including son Anil Rai Gupta and daughter-in-law Sangeeta Gupta.
He bought the Havells brand more than a decade later and expanded it from a garage-based manufacturing and distribution company to a business with about a dozen factories in India, as well as in Europe, Latin America, Africa and China, according to its website.
The company acquired SLI Holdings Inc.’s lighting business for 227 million euros ($309 million) in 2007 and sells electrical products under brand names including Crabtree, Concord and Standard, according to its website.
“Over a period of time, they have consistently grown with stable, improving margins, which have led to earnings growth,” UBS’s Chhaochharia said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Netty Ismail in Singapore at nismail3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Peter Newcomb at pnewcomb2@bloomberg.net Linus Chua, Robert LaFranco
Gupta, 77, and his family control almost 62 percent of the company, according to exchange filings, a stake valued at $1.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Anil Sharma, a spokesman for Havells, confirmed the family stake in the company based in Noida, near New Delhi.
The maker of lighting products, cables and fans has benefited from rising incomes in the world’s second-most populous nation as consumers shift to branded products, Firstcall Research said in a June 3 report. Havells owns Sylvania, a European maker of Lumiance lighting products.
“They have shown steady and quality performance in terms of growth and earnings,” said Gautam Chhaochharia, head of research at UBS Securities India Pvt. in Mumbai, who has a buy recommendation on the Havells. “That’s given investors confidence in the stock.”
The stock rose for a fifth day, advancing 1.1 percent to a record 1,067.55 rupee at the close in Mumbai yesterday. The shares have surged 35 percent this year, twice the gain for the S&P BSE Sensex (SENSEX) benchmark gauge.
Gupta, who’s the chairman of Havells, controls the fortune along with his family, including son Anil Rai Gupta and daughter-in-law Sangeeta Gupta.
School Teacher
In 1958, Gupta, then 21, quit his job as a school teacher in India’s Punjab state and moved to Delhi. With less than $200, he started a trading company selling fixtures and electric cables to businesses, according to Havells’ website.He bought the Havells brand more than a decade later and expanded it from a garage-based manufacturing and distribution company to a business with about a dozen factories in India, as well as in Europe, Latin America, Africa and China, according to its website.
The company acquired SLI Holdings Inc.’s lighting business for 227 million euros ($309 million) in 2007 and sells electrical products under brand names including Crabtree, Concord and Standard, according to its website.
“Over a period of time, they have consistently grown with stable, improving margins, which have led to earnings growth,” UBS’s Chhaochharia said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Netty Ismail in Singapore at nismail3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Peter Newcomb at pnewcomb2@bloomberg.net Linus Chua, Robert LaFranco
No comments:
Post a Comment