Graphic1


FEAT U R ES : COR PO R ATE ACC O U NT



SUZLON'S R ISE f rom the ASHES

The resurrection of what was once one of the world's largest wind turbine manufacturers has all the elements of a blockbuster, including a promoter determined to redeem himself, and

a deep-pocketed knight in shining armour


BY AV EEK DATIA


E

artier this year, Tulsi Tanti, the 57-year-old chairman and managing director of Suzlon Energy, moved into

his renovated office at One Earth,

the company's headquarters in Pune. The redesigned office in a sprawling, ten-acre campus in the city's Hadapsar area is better compliant with Vastu­ the Hindu science of architecture

that is supposed to channel positive natural energy to the benefit of those inhabiting the physical space. And Tanti's stars do appear to be better aligned at present than they have been in the past. His company, which has been struggling with losses since FY2009, posted its first quarterly operating profit in three years in the April-June 2015 period.

Though battle-scarred, Suzlon's chairman appears more relaxed now than he was ayear ago when

the company was overleveraged and operations were at a near standstill. Tanti has since been painstakingly trying to restore the credibility that he had lost with stakeholders like lenders


30 FORBES INDIA OCTOBER 2, 2015



TulsiTanti, 57, chairman and MD of Suzlon Energy,is confident that his company will turn in a net profit for the entire year this fiscal


OCTOBER 2,2015 I FORBES INDIA I 31



F EAT UR ES: CORPORATE ACCOU NT



and customers due to an infamous debt default that Jed to a restructuring of the company's borrowings and hamstrung its ability to sustain business operations at the same scale as before. 'The last 36 months have been the most turbulent times that

we have experienced,'says Tanti, a mechanical engineer by education.

Suzlon, a manufacturer of wind turbines and an end-to-end

turnkey engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) player in the wind energy space, holds the dubious distinction of being the largest defaulter on repayment of foreign currency convertible bonds (FCCBs) issued by any Indian company to date: In October 2012, it defaulted on the repayment of

  • FCCBs worth $209 million, which were due for redemption.

This was on the back of operational challenges at home and abroad arising from the economic downturn that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, and a debt-funded international expansion strategy that didn't go as per plan.

Suzlon, which used to rank among the top three wind turbine makers in the world, saw its business shrink rapidly due to liquidity constraints.

Itwasn't alone in the adversities it faced during this period: Several

Indian firms in the metal and mining sectors, especially those with significant exposure to international markets, burnt their fingers. But

not everyone has been able to script arecovery like Suzlon has.

Its turnaround is a story of how lenders can work with their borrowers to help a company get back on its feet while ensuring they recover their dues; a story of how awell-meaning white knight with deep pockets can change the tide of fortune; and, most importantly, of how a promoter can redeem himselfby setting his ego aside, putting the company's interests


before his own, and selling assets that may have been the crown jewels of hisbusiness.Suzlon was able to halve its debt from Rs 14,281crore

as of March 31, 2015, to a current Rs 7,010 crore. (This is excluding FCCBs that were restructured.)


THE GROWTH PHASE

Till 2007-08, Suzlon was a healthy company.In FY2008, it posted a consolidated net profit of Rs 1,017 crore on a turnover of Rs 13,679 crore. Over 20 years since Tanti founded it in 1995, the company has been supplying wind turbines to customers across

32 countries, in North and South America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. Through its wind turbines, it has helped establish awind power generation capacity of 26,000 MW the world over. In doing so, Suzlon had positioned itself as a competitive global player inthis space. In India specifically, government incentives

to promote wind power generation, including accelerated depreciation (AD) on wind power assets and generation-based incentives (GBI), attracted various companies towards creating wind power capacity.This meant brisk business for Suzlon.

With the Indian business doing well, Suzlon made somebig-ticket global acquisitions. In 2006, it acquired Belgian wind turbine gearbox manufacturing firm, Hansen Transmissions International NV, for

around €431million. In 2007, it bought a majority stake in the German wind turbine maker REPower (renamed Senvion in 2014). Between2007 and 20ll, Suzlon progressively ramped

up its stake in Senvion and eventually bought out the whole company.

Through several tranches, it paid around €1.4 billion to acquire Senvion. Most of this expenditure was funded through debt raised internationally.

Senvion gave Suzlon access to new and better technology, especially


in the offshore wind energy space, and greater access to international markets.The German firm soon accounted for a majority of Suzlon's consolidated turnover. In the nine­ monthperiod ending December 31, 2014, Senvion contributed as much as 73.5percent to Suzlon's consolidated revenues of Rs 14,928 crore.Also, while the standalone lndian business called Suzlon Wind reported aloss,

Senvion's operations helped the consolidated business report earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) of Rs 482 crore.


THE DOWNFALL

But when theworld economy took

a turn for the worse in2008, Suzlon got caught in a tailspin. A liquidity crunch in the global financial system meant that orders for wind


SUZLON'S RECOVERY IS A STORY OF HOW LENDERS CAN WOR K WITH THEIR BORROWERS TO GET A COMPANY BACK ON ITS FEET


32 FORBES INOIA OCTOBER 2, 2015



turbines from international clients clisappeared. In some instances, receivables from clients were delayed. The after-effect of the crisis was to last for a few years to come. ''We

were ina globalisation phase and the collapse of the financial market impacted our industry,' says Tanti.

To demonstrate the extent to which the global wind power sector stood beleaguered, Tanti notes that the top five wind turbine makers

in the world, including Vestas and GE, posted acombined loss of €2.5 billion in the calendar year 2013, the highest level of losses witnessed by the industry inthe last two decades. The situation could have been better for Suzlon had the Indian business continued to perform well. But that wasn't to be.The AD and GBI benefits that were extended to wind power developers in India were suddenly withdrawn in 2012 and Inclian firms clidn't have any further incentive to invest inthis sector. As a result, wind


turbine orders from India dried up.

When AD and GBI benefits were available to the wind power sector in India, capacity to the tune of 3,000 MW was being added per year. This fell dramatically to 1,500 MW after these incentives were withdrawn.

In the five years between

FY2010 and FY2015, Suzlon's losses widened nearly ten times to Rs 9,157.60 crore. Its turnover in the same period declined marginally

by 3.7 percent, to Rs 19,954 crore.


THE DEBT CONUNDRUM

Despite the challenges in the US and Inclia, Senvion continued to do well in Europe. But the German company

posed a unique problem for its Inclian acquirer. Suzlon had borrowed money from the European market

to.finance the Senvion acquisition, but following the financial crisis, the company had to transfer the

debt to India. In the process, its cost of borrowing went up, but Suzlon

managed to service thisdebt till its Inclian operations were generating enough cash. However, when the Indian market slumped, Suzlon's ability to service debt suffered as well.

'The main constraint thatwe faced was inGermany,'Tanti says. 'Itwasn't because it (Senvion) was a bad investment. But the banks

there clidn't support our investment. Senvion was a debt-free company, but neither clid they allow us to raise any debt on Senvion'sbalance sheet nor were we allowed to repatriate the cash profits from the company to Inclia, which could have then been used to service the debt related to

the acquisition that we transferred. Senvionbad a cash reserve of around

€300 million, but this money couldn't be utilised to pare the group's debt.'

Meanwhile, in2007, Suzlon also raised five-year FCCBs to the tune of $300 million to finance its

expansion in India. As these FCCBs neared maturity, Suzlon managed to pay off a smalltranche that fell due in June 2012 with money borrowed from its consortium of lenders, led by the State Bank of inclia (SBI). But the banks made it dear that Suzlon would have to fend for itself when

it came to repaying the remaining FCCBs that were due for redemption in October 2012, says Supratim Sarkar,

executive vice president at SBI Capital Markets,SBI's investment banking arm that has been actively involved in restructuring Suzlon's finances. Hectic negotiations between bondholders

and the company failed to secw·e Suzlon a four-month extension for debt repayment that it sought and the company defaulted on the redemption of FCCBs worth $208 million.

The writing on the wall could not have been clearer: Suzlon could no longer service its debts and the company went for corporate debt

restructuring (CDR) in January 2013.


THE RESTRUCTURING

CDR came with its own set of challenges for the company. 'Itwas a classic conflict. Whatever cash flows


OCTOBER 2,2015 I FORBES INOIA I 33

F E ATU R ES : COR PORATE ACC O UNT


HIGHS AND LOWS OVER TWO DECADES

2008

1 995 May 2006 May 2007 June 2007 September


Tulsi Tanti, a

Suzlon grows in

Acquires

Launches

Suzlon acquires

US investment

Global orders for

mechanical

India and abroad

Hansen

five-year

a majority stake

bank Lehman

wind turbines

engineer,

to rank among the

Transmissions

FCCBs

in German wind

Brothers

disappear; govt

establishes

top three

International

to raise

turbine maker

collapses and

withdraws AD and

Suzlon Energy

wind turbine

BV, a Belgian

$300 million

REPower (later

a global

GBI benefits for wind

Ltd,a wind

turbine maker

makers globally,

helping establish

wind turbine

gearbox

to fund

expansion

called Senvion).

Fully acquires firm

financial

meltdown

power producers

in India. Suzlon

and EPC player

26,000 MW of

manufacturer,

in India

in 2011 by paying

ensues

faces a liquidity

in the wind

wind power in

for €431

€1.4 billion

crisis, struggles

energy space

32 countries

million

in tranches

to repay debt


,

··


,

.

··

.........,,,_,,............-......-· -········'····............_,,,_, ........ .. ..· ··· ·· ..-··-·..............._,,_.. .......... _,,,...............................


the business generated went to the banks. Ifany money was left after that, it would go to my vendors and the remaining would be used to pay

salaries,'' Tanti says. 'Over the last two years, most of my employees haven't received their salaries on time. Under CDR,I don't control the company's cash; it is controlled by the banks.'

As a part of the restructuring, it was decided that the debt related to Senvion's acquisition would

be refinanced through a credit enhancement bond to be issued by Suzlon; this would be backed by a standby letter of credit from SBI. 'It wasn't an easy task at all, but JP

Morgan joined hands with us and we could manage to successfully place the bonds,' Sarkar of SBI Capital

Markets recalls. Consequently, Suzlon raised $647 million in March 2013.

Simultaneously, it also worked with bondholders to restructure the FCCBs it had issued in May 2007. After the restructuring, which took place in May 2014, the principal value of Suzlon's outstanding FCCBs stood at $575.7 million. Out of

this, the company is liable to repay

$28.8 million in April 2016 and the remaining in July 2019. The price for the conversion of these FCCBs into equity shares of the company was pegged at Rs 15.46 per share.

Since Suzlon's bondholders have a signi£cant upside in converting their bonds into shares, with the company's stock price consistently trading

above the conversion price, around

$248.1million worth of FCCBs had


36 FORBES !NOIA OCTOBER 2,2015

been converted into equity shares of the company till July 31, 2015. As a result, FCCBs worth $327.6 million are now left to be repaid.

IfSuzlon can maintain or improve its current share price (consider

that it was trading atRs 21.65 on September 10), Tanti expects the remaining FCCBs to be converted into shares as well, which would mean it may not have to shell out any extra cash to repay this component

of its debt. Suzlon also allotted some shares to its Indian lenders who have since sold them in the retail market to recover a part of their dues.

Excluding the FCCBs that


ROLLER-COASTER RIDE: SUZLON ENERGY,S FINANCIALS (CONSOLIDATED)

25000 '''''''''.............

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Suzlon had raised, the company had a debt of around Rs 14,281 crore as on March 31, 2015.


SELLING THE CROWN JEWEL

While lenders did their bit to restructure the company's debt, another key clause in the CDR package was that Suzlon would have

to monetise assets to generate the cash that was to be used to repay its debt More specifically, lenders coaxed Tanti to sell Senvion lock,stock and barrel. Suzlon managed to do so in April this year for a consideration

of around €1billion. (The deal was announced in January 2015.) The German company was sold to US private equity firm Centerbridge and the entire proceeds from the sale were used to retire debt.

As a result, Suzlon has managed to halve its outstanding debt (excluding the FCCBs) to Rs 7,010 crore at the end of the June quarter. Most of Suzlon's remaining debt is back­ ended. The company doesn't have any significant debt repayment obligation over the next two years, according to Tanti. 'I have to only keep servicing the interest cost, which works out

to Rs 800-900 crore per year and that can be easily done,'be says. As a result of all the initiatives, Suzlon's interest cost came down by as much as 36 percent quarter­

on-quarter to Rs 293 crore in the April-June 2015 period.

By this time, the outlook for the wind power market in India had begun to change for the better as




7




July 2011

June 2012

October

2012

January

2013

March

2013

January

2015

February 2015

Suzlon sells

Company

Defaults on

Suzlon goes

Issues credit

Suzlon's cash

Company

Dilip Shanghvi

Hansen to

repays first

repayment of

for corporate

enhancement

flows are

announces it will

and Associates

ease debt

tranche of

FCCBs worth

debt

bonds to raise

controlled by

sell Senvion to

acquires a 23%

burden

FCCBs using

$208 million

restructuring

$647 million.

lenders and

US-based PE fund

stake inSuzlon

funds sourced

-the largest

(CDR)

Money used to

go inrepaying

Centerbridge for

for Rs 1,800 crore.

from

default on FCCB

refinance and

debt.Operations

€1 billion. Funds

Invests Rs 400

consortium of

lenders led by

payment by an

Indian company

extend maturity

profile of debt

come to a near

halt. Payments

to be used to retire

debt. Sale com-

crore for a 50:50 JV to develop

State Bank related to to vendors, staff pleted in wind power

of India Senvion deal affected April2015


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incentives like AD and GBI were back on the table. 'He (Tanti) realised that he was constrained and wouldn't be able to take advantage of the business opportunity that the Indian market presented unless the debt overhang on the company was removed ,'says

P Pradeep Kumar, managing director and group executive (corporate banking) at SBI. 'It was at this

time that he felt that he needed to sellthe European subsidiary.'

Kumar says Tanti's initial plan was to take Senvion public and dilute his stake in the company by around 30 percent While this may have yielded Tanti a better valuation for his stake, it would have been a time-consuming process. Suzlon'slenders convinced

Tanti to sell Senvion at one go because 'cash was king'', says Kumar.


ENTER THE WHITE KNIGHT

Though the debt burden on Suzlon eased considerably, it still needed fresh funds to spur future business growth inorder to prepare itself to start servicing the back-ended loans that will be due again in two years.

Belonging to the same Gujarati business community, Tanti knew Dilip Shanghvi, managing director of Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, socially.

The two had common friends who approached Tanti to gaugehis interest in an equity partnership proposal from Shanghvi,who was looking at new avenues to invest his personal wealth.

'I told them that I was willing to meet, but any transaction could only happen after se!Hng Senvion as it

made sense to bring in equity only after reducing the debt overhang,' says Tanti. 'Ineeded the equity for business,not for debt repayment.'

With the divestment of Senvion on the cards,Tanti got talking with Shanghvi to understand why he wanted to invest in Suzlon. Two

meetings later, the deal was finalised.

InFebruary 2015, Dilip Shanghvi and Associates (DSA)-the Sun Pharma MD's personal investment vehicle-bought a 23 percent stake in Suzlon for Rs 1,800 crore.

This money, along with the cash of Rs 3,070 crore on Suzlon's books


BUSINESS AND ITS UNPREDICTABILITY : FLUCTUATING

MAR KET VALUE

uooo


Mar 31, 20U Mar 31, 2015


-Market capitalisation


Em!mB Capitali11e (Figures are in Rs crore)

as on June 30, 2015, and the fresh injection of funds that Tanti hopes to generate from operations,willbe

enough to take care of Suzlon'sgrowth aspirations for the next five years,

he says. Inan email interview with Forbes Ind ia, Shanghvi says he saw 'great potential' in Suzlon's business fundamentals due to its 'world-class technology and R&D capabilities'.

'Now that the company (Senvion) has been sold off, Suzlon's debt has become manageable. We believe Suzlon has the potential to become a global leader again,'says Shanghvi.

After the deal, and following the dilution of equitythat happened on account of conversion of FCCBs into equity shares, the Tantifamily held

a 21.8 percent stake in Suzlon as on June 30, 2015, while Shanghvi and his associates held one percent less than that. Though Shanghvi's stake in Suzlon is only marginally lower than. that of Tanti's,he is clear that his investment the company is purely financial in nature and that the Tanti family continues to manage

Suzlon. 'But ifthe team needs my strategic inputs on·any matter, I am happy to give,'says Shanghvi. He also

categorically rules out anypossibility of DSA raising its stake in Suzlon.

What also encouraged Tanti to accept Shanghvi's proposal was what the latter. told himduring the course of their discussions preceding the deal 'Dili pbliai said that he wanted to invest in the company as he wants to see Indian promoters position themselves as global leaders in the


OCTOBER 2,2015 I FORBES INDIA I 37

FE AT U R E S: CO R PO R ATE AC CO U N T



SUZLON'S CONSOLIDATED DEBT PROFILE

(AS ON JUNE 30, 2015)


t


Rupee term debt 11% J No principal repayment for

inext 3 years

:


investmentviable,' Tanti says.

At the same time, Suzlon is

willing to forego smaller markets like South Africa and Australia where it was the market leader earlier,but which aren't as lucrative as the four

$-denominated termdebt $689 mllllon

Credit enhancement bonds $647million


6.25%


'March 2.018 (bullet payment)

regions it is currently focusing on. The other vital part of Suzlon's

Others

$42 million

5%

future growth strategy is its renewed

FCCBs . $299 million . .............? - ---·· .....J JulyW19 ( bullet_ payment> ......

/ $28.8 million I 5% April 2016 (bullet payment)

. i ;

Working capital Rs 2,375 crore ; 11% 1 Annual renewal

focus on the India business. For instance, the JV formed between DSA

·······················-···-·-· ' -· · - · · · .......................................!.................................

E

cation

m!lllill Suz/on Energy QJFY161nvesror Prtstn

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and Suzlon is in a new line of business

for Suzlon. This as-yet-unnamed

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international marketplace and he

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4,000 crore, according to a Nomura

joint venture is aseparate 50:50 partnership, where each partner will

believed that Suzlon and I have the capability to achieve that,'Tanti says.

Tanti and Shanghvi's association isn't limited to the Rs 1,800 crore investment in Suzlon alone. Shanghvi has also invested Rs 400 crore in an equal joint venture (JV) created by the two entities that will develop wind power projects in India. DSA has also committed working capital loans to support the development of 1,200 MW of wind power generation capacity over a two-year period.


BACK ON THE GROWTH PATH

For the first quarter of FY2016, Suzlon posted a healthy net profit of Rs 1,079 crore. However, this net profit was largely the result of a one-time gain arising from an accounting treatment of foreign exchange translation due

to the sale of Senvion. But what is encouragingis that the company reported an operating profit apart from this one-off item as well, its first in three years. Its revenues stood at Rs 1,542 crore in the June quarter this year, up 66 percent over the preceding quarter. The company's Ebitda stood at Rs 146 crore during the same quarter, versus a loss of

Rs 554 crore in the March quarter. This is the highest quarterly Ebitda reported by the company in the last three years. Significantly, Suzlon reported a profit before interest and tax (PBIT) of Rs 85 crore during the June quarter, its first in three years.

At the same time, Suzlon has accumulated losses of around Rs


38 FORBES INDIA OCTOBER 2,2015

Research report dated June 5, 2015. Itneeds to recoup and the company may well do so if it can sustain the momentum it has displayed in the first quarter of the current fiscal.

Tanti is confident that as business . picks up,Suzlon will turn inanet profit for the entire year. Ifit succeeds in doing so, the company would have reported an annual net profit for the first time in six years. Suzlon aims

to get there through a recalibrated approach to international expansion as well as by growing its existing

and new lines of businesses in India. Tantisays his ambition is to help Suzlon regain the 50 percent global market share that itonce enjoyed.

In FY2015, Suzlon had a market share of 25 percent, Tanti says.'This year (FY2016), we are targeting a 35

percent market share and want to take it up to 45 percent next year,'he adds.

Though Suzlon has been operational in 32 countries in the past, it only wants to focus on

four international markets-India, China, North America (US, Mexico and Canada) and Latin America (Brazil, Argentina and Chile).

These four regions, according to Tanti, represent 70 percent of the global wind energy market.

'Merely catering to the 3,000 MW market in India won't be enough

to justify the $50 million per year­ investment that Suzlon will be putting in upgrading its technology each year. We need to be present in other markets as well to make this

invest Rs 400 crore to develop wind power. The entity will develop around 450-500 MW of wind power assets across Indian states and sell them to interested buyers, mostly financial investors lookingto get into India's promising renewable energy space.

The Narendra Modi-led government at the Centre has pegged a target of developing 60,000 MW

of wind power in India by 2022 and this augurs well for Suzlon, which is already seeing traction in the orders it executes. ''We are focussed on growing volumes again. In the last full fiscal (FY2015),Suzlon supplied turbines for 450 MW of capacity.

We have done 200 MW in the first quarter of the present fiscal alone,' Tanti says. He expects business to pick up in the second half of the fiscal, which is traditionally the period in which volumes increase as projects near commissioning.

Another potential game-changer for Suzlon's Indian business is the National Offshore Wind Energy Policy, which was approved by the government on September 9. Though Suzlon has sold Senvion, it was able to facilitate a technology transfer

that gives it precious know-how in manufacturing wind turbines that can be installed over water bodies. The company is conducting a feasibility study in Gujarat; the first pilot project will be for 600 MW.

Though Tanti refrains from providing any direct guidance,he indicates that India is expected to




add around 3,000 MW of wind power capacity in 2015-16 and Suzlon will target a 35 percent market share,

FCCB PRINCIPAL VALUE ($ MLN)

J July 2019 series j April 201 6 series I

implying a business of 1,050 MW.

This is significant as Tanti says that

at this level of production, Suzlon can break even, and with a subsequent ramp-up in volumes, the company will generate additional cash.

The other line of business that Suzlon is exploring is the development of hybrid power projects that

combine solar and wind energy. This can lead to the creation of a power project that generates

575.7


28.8 28.8

Post Conversions Current restructur ng till July 31,2015 outstanding

Jul y 2019 series conversi on detail s

Price Rs 15.46 per share

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FCCBs to the tune of $327.6 million remain outstanding on Suzlon's

books as on July 31, 2015. A price of RslS.46 per share had been pegged for the conversion of these bonds into equity shares. if Suzlon's shares continue to trade significantly higher than this level, bondholders are likely convert their debt into equity.

electricity round-the-clock and at a higher plant load factor, which is what investors want, Tanti says.

Assuming full conversion, debt to reduce and equity to increase by Rs 2,000 crore

Em!IZlil Suzlon Entrgy QIFY16 Investor Presentation

Suzlon plans to offer turnkey solutions to its clients by buying solar power installations from the open market through a bidding process

and combiningit with wind power equipment that will come from one of its 11 factories in India.It also plans to spend Rs 200 crore in

developing three production facilities in Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. Suzlon is also bullish on its services division

that looks after the maintenance of wind farms across the world. 'This is an annuity business and has grown to become 15 percent of our topline,' Tanti says.While Suzlon's wind turbines business

yields an operating profit margin of 12-15 percent, the services vertical operates at a 20 percent margin.

Analysts tracking the sector are pleasantly surprised by the

turnaround that Suzlon has exhibited so far and believe that the company can bounce back stronger over the next couple of years. This confidence bas even begun reflecting in the market value of the firm. Its market capitalisation has risen nearly five times from Rs 2,761.85crore (as on March 31, 2014) to Rs 10,981.10 crore as on March 31, 2015. The benchmark 30-share Sensex gained around 25 percent in the same period (see chart.)

'Suzlon has been an established player in the wind turbine market

having supplied more than 40 percent of India's 23 GW (1GW is equal to 1,000 MW) of installed

wind (power) capacity.With wind power gaining ground, the market is likely to expand to 3-4 GW per annum over the next two to three years, portending humongous

opportunities,'' says a June 12, 2015, report by Edelweiss Securities, which notes that the company bas a healthy current order book of 1,300 MW.


PUTTING THE COMPANY FIRST

The sale of Senvion and Shanghvi's investment helped bring Suzlon back from the edgeof the precipice, but lenders and merchant bankers who have worked with the company say all this may not have been possible had Tanti not put the company's interest before his own. 'What they (Suzlon) have done well is to work passionately on the suggestions we put forth to them-be it to enhance their management bandwidth or

sell crown jewels like Senvion- and showed determination in implementing these changes,' SBI's chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya tells Forbes India. 'At the end of

the day, he (Tanti) really and truly wanted to see his company do well.'

SBI's Sarkar says he met Tanti

every month or every alternate month over the last six years, working with himto turn Suzlon around.'One

good thing about Tulsi Tanti is that, unlike other promoters, he wanted his company to survive and turn around more than maintaining his own stake inthe firm,''says Sarkar. 'Where others may have been cowed down

by the kind of adversity that Suzlon had faced, Tanti tackled the situation head on, without blinking or pausing to think whatwould happen to his personal wealth inthe process.'

Though Tanti is happy with his company's present state of affairs, he hasn't forgotten the personal tribulations he has faced in the past. 'We have ensured that none of

our stakeholders suffer a financial loss, be they vendors, customers, employees or lenders. There may have been delays in payment, but no loss.The only loser has been the

promoter whose shareholding in the company bas fallen from 60 percent to around 20 percent,' says Tanti.

He has had to reach out to many people to seek help. 'When we went to some people to request their

help personally, we had to listen to some unpleasant things. They were apprehensive about whether they would get back their moneyor not.'

Over the last six years, Suzlon was caught in the eye of a storm that appears to have blown over.

After a long hiatus, the winds are finally blowing in the right direction at One Earth. Ii


OCTOBER 2, 201S I FORBES INDIA I 39

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