Spice Group chairman BK Modi back to running business, plans to raise a billion dollars
For sure, the Spice Group Chairman has interests in entertainment industry but it is the mobile handset industry that is giving him the rush of adrenalin.

Not since 1982, when he famously rode the Modi Xerox joint venture into India, has he been so excited as he is now. In the early eighties, Modi was the single-point gateway for many foreign multinational corporations keen on entering India. Then, about 25 MNCs tapped Modi to facilitate their India foray.
Straight out of the strategy session with senior executives — at his new headquarters in a modern, glass and steel building mysteriously named ‘Boomerang’ in Mumbai’s Saki Naka — Modi shares with ET his ambitious plans for the future.
At about the same time, his daughter Divya Modi was in Stockholm selling probably a very similar story to European investors at a road show to raise funds for his mobility business.
“We are looking to raise about $100 million this year, and perhaps another billion dollars next year,” Modi says casually. At the pace at which he has been acquiring companies across Southeast Asia, and his still insatiate appetite for more, Modi would certainly need the money. He is currently negotiating with three companies — Techno in South Africa, QMobile in Vietnam and Cherry Mobile in Philippines.
His biggest purchase so far has been an Indonesian handset manufacturer Nexian, which he bought in May for around $175 million according to business magazine Forbes. In 2009, flush with cash — about Rs 2,700 crore — from the sale of his Indian telecom operations under the banner Spice Communication to Idea Cellular, Modi was looking for suitable assets in Southeast Asian economies.
However, he soon realised that the firms he wanted to buy preferred to work with an Asian company and not necessarily an Indian company. So in 2009, Modi bought the Singapore-listed firm Mediaring for S$60 million. He renamed it Si2i, where i2i stands for Indonesia to Ivory Coast, making it his umbrella firm for Asian operations. Mediaring gave Modi access to subsidiaries in Tokyo, Kuala Lampur, Shanghai and Beijing. Armed with Mediaring, Modi went shopping for handset makers across neighbouring countries.
First to be folded into Modi’s i2i was Malaysia’s CL group, in which he picked up 65% for $25 million. He followed up with NewTel of Thailand with a popular local brand called Blueberry. For the $22 million that Modi paid for NewTel he also got operational bases in Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar. The acquisitions are aimed at helping Modi increase handsets sales from the current 1.5 million pieces to 10 million a month over the next three years. “Don’t judge us by what we sell now,” says Modi.
“Judge us by what we are going to sell.” “Emerging markets are high growth markets. Sales are higher than matured markets. This is an ideal strategy for mobile phone handset makers who are looking for high growth,” says Anshul Gupta of Gartner’s principal research analyst. “We are in talks with leading handset makers in the Philippines and Vietnam,” Modi said. That is besides his planned big buy in South Africa, where Modi is close to buying a local brand that claims sales of about 1.3 million handsets a month across the African continent.
Even as he is stitching together a pan-Asian story, investors are yet to give him the thumbs up. To be fair, Modi has no qualms in admitting that his listed firm in Singapore is not doing well, at least when looked at from the share price perspective. Integration of all the companies he has been picking up in the Asian markets may also be one reason why investors are wary, at least for now. “They are looking to see our story,” Modi said speculating on possible investor rationale for not rushing to his company's shares.
On His Indian Competitors
With Modi talking mobile handsets and talking of millions of unit sales a month, it is only fair to compare what he wants to do with famous Indian handset stories such as Micromax. Although Micromax popularised it, Spice was the first to introduce dual-SIM mobile phones in India. However, Spice is generally perceived to have failed to capitalise on that first-mover advantage. “They (Micromax) are very good at mobiles.” But that’s where the comparison ends according to Modi. “I don’t know whether they will be able to make the transition to mobile internet. They do not have the value added services. We have.” Modi goes on to point out that Micromax does not own a handset retail chain, which he does – about 800 stores.
The Story So Far
To back up a little and trace his footsteps, in 1982, Modi believed he had created its own identity for his fledgling group. He started with two copy shops, one in Delhi and one in Mumbai with four demo machines he got from Xerox free of cost. The demo machines were to be sent back to the firm in six months, but Modi managed to get extensions without having to return it. Although he was a joint venture partner, he wanted to run it his way but with the branding of the MNC and laws around foreign ownership helped Modi. “I was working with Xerox and not under them. That was the best decision I took in my life, when we created the company keeping in mind the culture of India, the customer requirements,” he remembers with nostalgia. There were huge learnings from that venture. Eventually in early 90s, when Indian government opened up the gates and relaxed rules around foreign ownership, Modi sold his share to Xerox for a handsome profit.
The Come Back
Of Hat And Casual Attire
Modi may be a rarity, in that, he is one of the very few Indian business personalities to be seen perpetually wearing a hat. When Modi decided to come out of the ashram, he sported an hirsute look. Obviously, it did not go well with his taking over the reins of the company. For a company that caters to the youth, the chairman should have a style that he could call his own. “When I went to America and Facebook’s office, I saw that everybody was wearing jeans,” Modi said. “Look at the attire of Steve Jobs, he had to relate to his customers, he has to connect with them.” That’s when he decided on his trade mark attire of blue jeans, waist coat and hat, Modi says.
Father, Son And Daughter Team
The Other Modi
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