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How the Wadhawans offer a peek into the lives of powerful crony capitalists

According to the Enforcement Directorate, the Wadhawans had real estate dealings with gangster Dawood Ibrahim's aide and drug trafficker Iqbal Mirchi, whom they allegedly met in London.

April 10, 2020 / 08:58 PM IST
Kapil Wadhawan

Kapil Wadhawan

 
 
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Not long ago, the Wadhawans — Kapil and Dheeraj — promoters of the crisis-hit DHFL embodied success and were perfect role models for young aspirants of aggressive entrepreneurship. DHFL was a name to reckon with in India's mortgage lending business.

Bu then, what a difference a few months can make. The fall of the brothers was as steep as it was sudden. The Wadhawans are now the central figures in a raft of investigations into cases of skulduggery at DHFL and Yes Bank. Investigating agencies also accuse them of underworld links with respect to certain real estate transactions.

Yet, none of these seemingly worrisome charges have dented their immense political clout. What else would explain them managing to get a letter from a top bureaucrat in Maharashtra to go on a family holiday to a prominent tourist spot in the middle of a lockdown on the alleged pretension of 'family emergency' — all this when they are under the radar of multiple investigative agencies?

Also Read: Kapil and Dheeraj Wadhawan detained in Mahabaleshwar for violating Section 144

The irony is stark because the Wadhawans were skipping summons from the Enforcement Directorate (ED) citing the COVID-19 outbreak.

Always in the headlines (for the wrong reasons)

The Wadhawans  continue to embody the rich crony capitalist — typical in Bollywood flicks. Compare this with the case of a common man who is at the wrong side of the law, say for defaulting a business loan.

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The fall of Kapil Wadhawan, whose family built one of the most fascinating mortgage businesses in India, came much quicker than his rise. Even if one sets aside the criminal element to the story, DHFL's collapse is an important case study on how promoters can destroy even successful businesses by growing too big and too fast.

"An NBFC is always at the mercy of its financiers. It needs to be careful at all times. Somewhere, DHFL forgot this cardinal rule," said a senior analyst who has been tracking the firm for years. For almost two decades, DHFL was an enviable story in India’s booming housing finance space. With total assets under management of over a trillion rupees, and an aggressive approach to the fast-growing affordable housing market, DHFL was able to stand apart from the new crop of competitors, and even some of the established ones.

Banks and investors once queued up before the Wadhawans' office for business. The firm's shares hit a peak of Rs 690 on September 3, 2018 valuing it higher than some of the competing full-fledged banks. Kapil, who nearly two decades ago inherited the legacy of the firm - set up by his father Rajesh Wadhawan back in 1984 - was a sought-after man in Mumbai's financial world.

How the cookie crumbled

All of it collapsed like a pack of cards. The first shock came in September 2018 when DHFL plunged into a deep liquidity crisis and began defaulting to investors. But that was only one side of the story. Not long after that, stories of the Wadhawans sailing to the forbidden waters flirting with Mumbai’s underworld surfaced.

"When I took up my first day, it was like being put into the deep sea with no land in sight, but when I look back, the last 20 years have not only been challenging but also satisfying," Kapil Wadhawan had told The Economic Times in an interaction just the month before the shares hit the peak. It  was probably the last time Wadhawan grabbed the headlines for the right reasons.

DHFL's liquidity crunch triggered fresh defaults and panic in markets. As in the case of any housing finance company, the biggest funding sources of DHFL were banks and mutual funds. Both began to shut doors to DHFL one by one in the following weeks. Rating agencies flashed warning signals to investors, adding to their woes.

The IL&FS crisis, which occurred following years of mismanagement and dangerous over-leveraging by the Wadhawans, weighed down DHFL heavily. When the mess deepened, the RBI finally superseded the board on  November 20, 2019, and later pushed the firm to the NCLT for insolvency resolution ten days later. The company was admitted for IBC proceedings on 3 December and the writing was on the wall for them.

Iqbal Mirchi link

But DHFL's misery wasn't confined to its financial situation. There was more than meets the eye. The Wadhawans -- Kapil and his brother Dheeraj -- were allegedly engaged in a web of unlawful transactions involving the underworld.

According to the ED, the Wadhawans had real estate dealings with gangster Dawood Ibrahim's aide and drug trafficker Iqbal Mirchi, whom they allegedly met in London.

Kapil allegedly created a string of shell companies to facilitate illicit financial transactions and purchase prime real estate properties belonging to Mirchi’s family in Mumbai’s Worli area. The Wadhawans also routed money from DHFL to the shell companies in which Kapil Wadhawan had shares. DHFL, at one stage, was used like a piggy bank by the Wadhawans, who had unquestionable control over it.

The fate of DHFL is now up to the bankruptcy court. With its share price nosediving to Rs 15 apiece, the market capitalisation of DHFL is just about Rs 470 crore, making it an easy buy for any prospective bidder.

But the question is if even that price is worth taking over the mess. With a total debt of Rs 80,000 crore and half of it to commercial lenders, banks are a worried lot and, sure, wouldn’t be mute spectators as the process progresses.

The total collateral that banks can claim from DHFL is worth only a few billion rupees against a debt of Rs 40,000 crore. Whoever buys DHFL, if it comes to that, will have to have a deep pocket to set the course of the ship in rough waters. For the second time in his life, Kapil Wadhawan has been pushed into the deep sea with no land in sight.

(Note: This is an updated version of an earlier piece)

Dinesh Unnikrishnan
Dinesh Unnikrishnan
first published: Apr 10, 2020 02:40 pm

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