Quantum leaps: Nine billionaires who saw their wealth soar
Wealth of these nine tycoons has swelled the most since Forbes India's first Rich List


In 2009, a little over $400 million could have earned you a place in the club of 100 richest Indians. Reeling from the aftermath of the global financial crisis, India was home to just 52 billion-dollar fortunes that year, led by Reliance Industries Chairman and Managing Director Mukesh Ambani. Ranked 52nd on the 2009 Forbes India Rich List was Anand Jain—a childhood friend of Mukesh Ambani and chairman of Jai Corp—who, with a net worth of $1 billion, stood at the border line dividing the billionaires from the millionaires.
Those were testing times for Indian Inc. Uncle Sam had sneezed (read: The subprime crisis hit) and India too had caught the flu. So much so that the Sensex, which first breached the 21,000 mark in January 2008, shed 64 percent of its value by October that year.
Cut to 2017, and India is once again an economic force to reckon with. Today, the country is home to more than 100 three-comma fortunes (still led by Ambani, whose wealth in 2017 stood at $38 billion) and the price of entry to the Forbes India Rich List has jumped to $1.46 billion. Ranked 52nd on the 2017 Forbes India Rich List was Ashwin Choksi of Asian Paints with a net worth of $2.95 billion.
Forbes India takes a look at nine Indian businessmen whose wealth increased the most (in percentage terms) between 2009 and 2017.
Benu Gopal Bangur Shree CementIncrease in wealth between 2009 and 2017: 746%The Kolkata-based Bangur family patriarch, Benu Gopal Bangur, was worth $780 million in 2009. In 2017, 87-year-old Bangur had a net worth of $6.6 billion, a whopping 746 percent increase. In January 2000, shares of Shree Cement could be picked up for ₹55 apiece, which looks insignificant compared to its price in September 2017—₹18,500. Currently run by his son Hari Mohan Bangur and grandson Prashant, Shree Cement has seen revenues soar to ₹8,937 crore in FY17 from ₹5,688 crore the year before. With a market cap of ₹60,207 crore, Shree Cement is second only to UltraTech Cement’s ₹112,203 crore. The promoter group holds about 65 percent of the company.
Karsanbhai Patel delisted Nirma in 2012 Image: Alok BrahmbhattKarsanbhai Patel NirmaIncrease in wealth between 2009 and 2017: 620%The low-profile Karsanbhai Patel, 73, saw his wealth skyrocket from $500 million in 2009 to $3.6 billion in 2017. Nirma, the company he set up in 1969, made its mark with the eponymous low-cost detergent powder brand, before branching out to personal care, soda ash and even cement. In July 2016, Nirma beat Ajay Piramal and the Jindal family’s JSW Cement to buy French cement major Lafarge’s India operations for $1.4 billion. Patel delisted Nirma in 2012. At the time, the promoters held about 77 percent of the company.
PV Ramprasad Reddy, Aurobindo PharmaIncrease in wealth: 481%PV Ramprasad Reddy, 59, saw his wealth increase by 481 percent to $3.14 billion between 2009 and 2017. His firm, Aurobindo Pharma, founded in 1986, manufactures generic pharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical ingredients. The company had its share of highs and lows. For instance, in 2016, it was embroiled in a controversy and saw the value of shares decrease after a US FDA inspection made adverse observations about one of its factories. Aurobindo Pharma has since responded to the concerns and got an approval from the regulator. The company’s stock has jumped from about ₹70 in July 2009 to about ₹690 in September 2017. The promoters’ group owns about 49 percent of the ₹36,871-crore company.
First Published: May 18, 2018, 16:09
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