Editorial     

Shock waves of US bank collapse

The sudden and unexpected collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in the US has sent shivers down the spines of the financial industry, and has major implications for the broader market and economy. Though the Indian economy and markets cannot remain unaffected by such a huge failure, the impact will not be that severe, if experts are to be believed.

Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), which specialises in providing financing to technology and innovation start-ups, has been a crucial player in the Silicon Valley ecosystem for decades. Its collapse signals not only the failure of one institution but also highlights broader economic and structural issues facing the tech industry.

With borrowings being easy and cheap for new companies in the tech industry, they had substantial amounts of money to invest. Some of these companies chose to deposit their surplus funds in SVB, which in turn used the funds to purchase long-term debt instruments to earn more money as interest rates decreased, but without taking adequate protection measures. However, when the US Federal Reserve resorted to raising interest rates quickly in order to tame spiralling inflationary pressures, some depositors preferred to withdraw their funds. In order to return the money to the depositors, the bank had to sell its long-term investments at a loss, which resulted in SVB losing money. Along with this, depositors began withdrawing money for better use when rates began to rise. This loss made it more challenging for the bank to continue operating. This ultimately led to the collapse of the bank.

No doubt, the immediate impact of the collapse of SVB has been felt in the tech start-up space, with many young companies struggling to secure funding and access to capital. The bank’s loan portfolio, which includes many high-risk features, has been thrown into disarray, leaving many businesses without the financial support they need to survive and grow.

The wider implications of the collapse are more far-reaching. The bank’s failure is indicative of the growing financial instability within the tech sector. It is feared that the collapse of SVB could trigger a wider financial crisis in the tech industry as other lenders and investors realize their risky capital exposure to start-ups, leading to a slowdown in innovation and economic growth.

The bank’s collapse could also have a knock-on effect on the broader economy, as the tech sector has become a key driver of growth and employment in many regions, including India. If the tech industry experiences a contraction, this could have a ripple effect on the broader economy, including areas such as real estate, manufacturing and retail.

Of course, as far as India is concerned, there will be no major impact on the Indian banking sector. However, the tech industry here has emerged as a significant driver of growth and innovation in recent years. The Indian economy is home to many start-ups and tech companies that rely on financing and investment from institutions like SVB. If a major player in the tech financing sector were to collapse, this could have significant implications for the Indian tech industry and the broader economy.

In addition to these economic implications, SVB’s collapse also raises important questions about the role of financial institutions in fostering innovation and growth. As the tech industry has grown, it has become increasingly reliant on specialized lenders and investors such as SVB to provide the capital needed to fuel innovation and distribution. Thus, the collapse of SVB highlights the risks inherent in this model and raises important questions about how best to finance and support innovation in the future.

As far as India is concerned, it remains to be seen how far-reaching the implications of the SVB collapse will be on the Indian economy, besides the spectre of massive job cuts. In fact, SVB was a major lender to businesses operating in the US-India market. Thus, the bank’s failure raises concerns about the far-reaching consequences for these firms, forcing them to adopt drastic cost-cutting measures such as job cuts or hiring freezes.

The Indian financial system too could get impacted if exporters who are dependent on the US market start seeing a slowdown in their business. That in turn would impact job growth and their ability to be pay back their bank loans. A lot of venture capital investment coming into India would also slow down. But in the aftermath of the SVB episode, an immediate problem is that lending to start-ups would get severely restricted.

written by

Deven Malkan

Cover story     

Thane Belapur Industrial Belt

One of India’s most prominent industrial zones, the 28-km-long Thane-Belapur Industrial Belt is facing a midlife crisis on account of crumbling infrastructure and official apathy, exacerbated by Green activism and fears of a negative impact of Western recession on the Indian economy.

Corporate Grapevine         

Ambani steers clear of RIL debt tap

Far-sighted and enlightened industrialist Mukesh Ambani, Chairman and MD of Reliance Industries, realised quite early about the perils of high debt. In 2020, even when the Covid pandemic was raging in India, the company sold stakes in both its telecom and retail firms to the world’s top private equity firms.

Ruias join bids for NMDC steel plant

Arcelor Mittal, the Tata group and the JSW group are leading the race to buy the government’s stake in the NMDC steel plant. NMDC has spent Rs 20,000 crore to set up the plant, which took off after several years of delay.

Loans repayment to Adani rescue

The turnaround in Adani group stocks has come as a breather for its small shareholders. Thanks to prepayment of loans, Adani shares are fast recovering. The Adanis have stated that they have prepaid share-backed financing of another Rs 7,374 crore ($ 902 million) ahead of its latest maturity in April 2025.

Is foreign bear cartel gunning for Vedanta?

After the foreign attack on Adani shares, the Vedanta group is under the lens of a foreign cartel. Vedanta announced that it has already prepaid debt of $ 2 bn in the last 11 months. The group is also in talks to raise $1 bn to buy back government equity in Hindustan Zinc.

Jackey's Column     

ZYDUS LIFESCIENCES - Big footprint in global markets

ZYDUS LIFE Sciences Ltd (formerly Cadila Healthcare Ltd) is one of the top Indian pharmaceutical companies. The Zydus group is headquartered in Ahmedabad. It has more than 30 manufacturing plants and research facilities spread across Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Himachal Pradesh and Sikkim in India, as well as in the US and Brazil.

Fortune Scrip     

Old brand, dynamic new avatar

At a time when the domestic as well as international stock markets have been facing headwinds from geopolitical issues triggered by the prolonged Russia-Ukraine war, fears of recession in the US and Europe, the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and widespread allegations against Indian industrialist Gautam Adani, who is said to be close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, it takes a lot of patience to select the Fortune Scrip. After a lot of thinking, we have picked Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals Ltd as the Fortune Scrip for this fortnight.

Share X-Ray         

One-stop shop for pipe solutions

Last September, Welspun Corp (WCL), together with its wholly owned subsidiary Nauyaan Shipyard Pvt. Ltd (Nauyaan), won a bid of Rs 659 crore with respect to the purchase of specified assets of distressed borrower ABG Shipyard at Dahej in Gujarat.

From control gear to EV chargers

A part of the 60-year-old and renowned Coimbatore-based Lakshmi group, LECS began its journey in 1981 by setting up a manufacturing unit spread over five acres in collaboration with Sprecher & Schuh of Switzerland to manufacture control gear — its first product. After three years, it widened its product basket by adding control panels, engineering plastic components and commercial toolroom moulds. Later, it added smart meters as well.

Corporate Report     

Growing from strength to strength

Gujarat-based Anupam Rasayan, a leading manufacturer of multi-synthesis molecules such as speciality chemicals related to agrochemicals, personal care and pharmaceuticals which has cross the milestone of Rs. 1000-crore turnover last year is growing from strength to strength.

Portfolio Choice         

Indian brainpower for e-mobility - KPIT TECHNOLOGIES

Pune-headquartered KPIT Technologies is a leading global technology company and a crucial partner to the automotive and mobility ecosystem for making software-defined vehicles a reality. It is a leading independent software development and integration partner, helping mobility leapfrog towards a clean green, smart and safe future. KPIT provides solutions to more than 150 companies and enterprises in the field of CASE (Connected, Automomous, Shared and Electric) mobility.

Ripe pick for wise investors - ADANI WILMAR

‘Bad’ news for the stock market can actually be good news for discerning investors. Along with the selling avalanche in Adani group stocks in the wake of the Hindenburg Research report, the stock price of Adani Wilmar also plunged from Rs 879, the 52-week high reached on April 28, 2022, to Rs 327 (February 28, 2023) — quite an attractive level to accumulate these stocks. Knowledgeable investors rushed to buy and the price moved up to Rs 450. Viewed in the context of the pressure on the Adani group, the share price may remain subdued for some time, providing good opportunities to buy this stock.

Penny stock with bright future - KHAITAN CHEMICALS & FERTILISERS

Madhya Pradesh-based Khaitan Chemicals & Fertilisers is engaged in the manufacture of single super phosphate (SSP), a popular fertiliser, sulphuric acid and soya edible oil. The company has the largest SSP production capacity in the country of 11,13,500 mt and strives to maintain its numero uno position. Its sulphuric acid production capacity is 2,27,600 mt, and it also has a 4,20,000 tpa soyabean crushing capacity along with a 30,000 tpa edible oil refinery located in Ratlam (MP), for which it uses technology from world leader NV Extraction Desmet SA of Belgium.

Special Feature         

$ 1.3 bn. Versatile vendor to power sector

In its six-decade journey, APAR Industries has evolved into a comprehensive player in the domestic as well as global power sector with its thrust on cutting-edge R&D, growing various verticals and being focused on the goals of energy saving and sustainability. In an interview with Corporate India, Kushal Desai Chairman and Managing Director of APAR, lays stress on the motto of the company to ‘make this world a more energy-efficient, environmentally sustainable and safer place.

Best-run CETP in Maharashtra

The Common Effluent Treatment Plant (Thane Belapur), Navi Mumbai, is one of the biggest, best- performing and professionally run CETPs in Maharashtra, having a total capacity of 27 mld.

Leader in Precision Machined Forgings

Headquartered in the Thane-Belapur industrial belt of Navi Mumbai, Pradeep Metals Ltd, an ISO-9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, ISO 45001:2018, PED and AS 9100D certified company, is engaged in the manufacture of closed die metal forgings and fully machined precision components since 1984. The company specialized in low volume-high mix components in carbon, alloy, stainless, duplex, super duplex, nickel alloys and titanium steel forgings for the valves, instrumentation, pharma, dairy, defense, railways, mining, oil & gas and general engineering industries. It offers forged and fully machined components and bar machined components for the above industries.

The changing face of Industrial Relations in India

Industrial Relations (IR) in India had been very cordial during both ancient and medieval periods. Employers and employees enjoyed good mutual respect and there was peaceful co-existence between the two.

Cutting-edge strategies for growth

RPG Life Sciences is an over five-decade-old pharma company that started as a joint venture with GD Searle of the US. With Searle exiting India, the company got rechristened as RPG Life Sciences, inheriting iconic/text-book brands, as well as R&D/manufacturing/regulatory infrastructure, processes and equity. It is amongst the few mid-size pharma companies that are well-represented in all three segments — domestic formulations, international formulations and APIs – and having the manufacturing infrastructure, organization structure, experience and skill set of an evolved organization with strong front-end and back-end capabilities.

Partner of choice to global pharma

Indoco is a fully integrated, research-oriented pharmaceutical company with a presence in 55 countries. The company’s turnover is $ 198 million and it has a human capital of 6,000 employees, including over 300 skilled scientists and field staff who are the strength of the organization.

Numero Uno in rubber chemicals

NOCIL (National Organic Chemicals Ltd.) is a part of the Arvind Mafatlal Group of Industries (AMG), a well-known business house in India with diversified business interests. NOCIL today is the largest rubber chemicals manufacturer in India, having commenced manufacturing operations in 1975. NOCIL’s involvement in the rubber chemicals business spans over 4 decades.

New-gen talent drive its growth

Pemac — an acronynm for Project Engineering Management and Consultancy — is a leading project manufacturer, exporter and service provider for turnkey projects. It has a team of new-generation, innovative professionals who anticipate the emerging requirements of processors for development and implementation of the latest technologies to keep up with the market competition.

One-stop solution for toxic waste

Trans Thane Creek Waste Management Association’s hazardous waste treatment storage facility, located at P-128, Mhape, is a one-stop solution for industrial toxic waste liabilities.

Life time achievement award for ‘Sulphur Man of India’

Deepak Shah (76), Chairman of Sulphur Mills Limited, now known as SML Limited which pioneered the development of specialized formulations that add value to agrochemicals, has been awarded a lifetime achievement award. A US-educated mechanical engineer, Mr Shah is a techno entrepreneur-turned-industrialist who has tirelessly worked for the last half a century and has received many Awards for his outstanding contributions in the agriculture sector.

February 15, 2025 - First Issue

Industry Review

VOL XVI - 10
February 01-15, 2025

Formerly Fortune India Managing Editor Deven Malkan Assistant Editor A.K. Batha President Bhupendra Shah Circulation Executive Warren Sequeira Art Director Prakash S. Acharekar Graphic Designer Madhukar Thakur Investment Analysis CI Research Bureau Anvicon Research DD Research Bureau Manager (Special Projects) Bhagwan Bhosale Editorial Associates New Delhi Ranjana Arora Bureau Chief Kolkata Anirbahn Chawdhory Gujarat Pranav Brahmbhatt Bureau Cheif Mobile: 098251-49108 Bangalore Jaya Padmanabhan Bureau Chief Chennai S Gururajan Bureau Chief (Tamil Nadu) Ludhiana Ajitkumar Vijh Bhubaneshwar Braja Bandhu Behera

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