He's seen it all and emerged taller  - Business Standard
June 17, 2011
Yogesh Chander  Deveshwar or "Yogi" Deveshwar, as he is popularly known in industry circles, is  young at 64, much like the company that he runs. ITC Ltd turned 100 on August  24, 2010, but, with its many fledgling businesses, it is still young in many  ways. 
When he took over as  ITC chairman in January 1996, Deveshwar inherited several problems, ranging  from tax evasion charges to a public spat with the company's single largest  shareholder, BAT plc, to investments that went awry. Deveshwar has put all of  this behind, and managed to steer the company to new heights.
"Leaders are people  who have the ability to work under difficult conditions. Deveshwar is a tested  case in that respect. He has seen it all and emerged taller," an independent  director associated with the company said.
In his 15-year  tenure, ITC's top line has grown by more than six times, from Rs 5,000 crore to  Rs 32,854 crore, while post-tax profits zoomed from Rs 260 crore to a shade shy  of Rs 5,000 crore. Unsurprisingly, therefore, Deveshwar is the chosen one to  steer the company for another five years, even though his extension has been  the subject of much discussion.
Apart from hotels,  which the company forayed into in 1975, and paperboards (four year later),  Deveshwar led a host of new initiatives - non-cigarette FMCG, agri business and  information technology - that transformed a tobacco company into an FMCG major  in just about 10 years.
"When ITC decided to  diversify, there was a lot of boardroom pressure from its foreign shareholder,  today there is none," an official said. Nothing succeeds like success, people  say.
 For ITC, the last decade or so is not just a phase  that can be told with numbers. It was a period of innovation led by Deveshwar,  who is a visionary, colleagues believe.
The paper business is  a case in point. Twelve years ago, the business was bleeding, but with the help  of a clonal propagation programme, covering 100,000 hectares (or Mumbai and  Pune put together), it turned around.
Deveshwar likes doing  things differently. Whether it was a pioneering initiative like e-choupals or  ITC's green initiatives labelled as sustainability goals that translated into  24 per cent shareholder returns (measured in terms of increased market  capatilisation and dividends), Deveshwar's innovative and inspiring ideas were  at their core.
Yet, there is room  for improvement. At a press conference following the company's last annual  general meeting; Deveshwar had said that ITC's biggest problem was that it  couldn't generate enough ideas to use its internal resources. "We can borrow Rs  16,000 crore to Rs 17,000 crore and will still have a debt equity ratio of  1:1," he had told mediapersons.
With that kind of  resources, it's not surprising that every time ITC makes an entry into a  company stock, it sparks speculation. ITC's "treasury" operations in EIH Ltd  (which runs the Oberoi chain of hotels) and Hotel Leela Venture, are well  known.
ITC may or may not  have had takeover designs, but it certainly was a good investment for the  company. When the company started buying EIH stock, it was hovering at Rs 35 a  share, taking ITC's notional gains to around Rs 600 crore, not too long ago.
 Is that all that Deveshwar wanted from EIH? Not clear,  but Deveshwar has more important challenges ahead. He will have to groom a  successor that will take ITC to the next level of growth.
"To groom someone who  can carry on the work that he has done all these years is Deveshwar's biggest  challenge ahead. He has to ensure that the company does not miss him," the  independent director said.
The task is well-nigh  impossible, colleagues believe.