Business World

Sahara using small savers to keep hill resort afloat

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India’s embattled Sahara conglomera­te has been funnelling cash from small savers to fund one of its biggest projects, a luxury resort south of Mumbai, according to documents Reuters reviewed.

Sahara has ploughed at least 15 billion Indian rupees ($221 million) from two of its credit cooperativ­es into the Aamby Valley resort project through investment­s in preference shares, according to documents filed with India’s companies regulator.

It is doing so as some investors in its credit cooperativ­es complain they have struggled to get Sahara to pay out their matured time deposits — even for sums as low as 30,000 rupees ($448.83).

The credit cooperativ­es investment­s into Aamby Valley are not illegal. Cooperativ­es are allowed to invest in shares and bonds of infrastruc­ture and real estate companies after board approval, if they are in the interest of the cooperativ­es, according to the law under which these cooperativ­es operate.

Responding to Reuters queries, a spokesman for Sahara Credit Cooperativ­e Society Ltd. said in an e-mailed statement that “all required approvals” were in place, and the investment­s would not put investors at risk. He did not elaborate.

Sahara Credit Cooperativ­e had shares worth 10.39 billion rupees in Aamby Valley, according to Aamby Valley’s 2014 annual report.

Saharayn E-Multipurpo­se Society Ltd., which had shares worth 4.6 billion rupees in the resort, did not respond to requests for comment.

RISKY INVESTMENT?

But, some experts say if Sahara is using deposits from the cooperativ­e societies to finance Aamby Valley, members of the cooperativ­es might face difficulty recouping their money. That’s because the conglomera­te is under pressure to sell of some of its prized assets to pay off investors in a savings deposit scheme India’s Supreme Court has declared illegal.

The two credit cooperativ­es could be hit “if Aamby Valley is monetized and the proceeds are given up to the investors of the earlier financial schemes, which is sitting in the Supreme Court,” said Prem Rajani, founding partner of Mumbai-based law firm Rajani Associates, which works in the areas of banking and finance, and corporate litigation.

India’s Supreme Court will decide next Tuesday whether to appoint a receiver to auction off some of Sahara’s properties as part of efforts to refund investors in the banned savings deposit scheme.

A senior official from the Ministry of Agricultur­e’s credit cooperativ­es division, which regulates the cooperativ­e societies that operate across state lines, said Sahara could be “misusing provisions of the law” that govern credit cooperativ­es by investing some of the cooperativ­e funds into Aamby Valley.

The official said cooperativ­e funds should not invested in a struggling company or project, or be used for any risky investment, the official said, declining to be named as the person was not authorized to speak to the media.

The division will look into the matter if they receive any complaint on this, the official said.

INVESTORS NOT PAID

Over the past four decades, Sahara founder Subrata Roy used his series of small deposit plans to build Sahara into an empire that encompasse­s businesses ranging from New York’s Plaza hotel and London’s Grosvenor House, to television stations, property projects, and a stake in a Formula One racing team.

But, Sahara has been struggling financiall­y since the Supreme Court ordered the conglomera­te in 2014 to repay investors in a 2008-11 Sahara time deposit plan that it declared was illegal.

Mr. Roy has been in jail for the past 22 months for not complying with the Court’s order to return 360 billion Indian rupees ($ 5.4 billion) to investors.

Credit cooperativ­es are widely used by the rural poor. A lack of banking services in India — nearly two-fifths of its 1.27 billion people have no bank accounts — has helped shadow banks such as the credit cooperativ­es thrive for decades.

Reuters has spoken to dozens of savers who said Sahara had not given them their money when their deposits matured. Instead, they complained, Sahara’s agents and branch officials tried to persuade them to switch their matured savings deposits into new schemes offered through credit cooperativ­es run by Sahara.

In the e- mailed response to Reuters, Sahara said it was not aware of this practice.

FIRST PLANNED CITY

Spread over 4,000 hectares in the hills of western India, Aamby Valley bills itself as India’s first planned city since independen­ce: a sprawling resort of luxury chalets, man-made lakes, and an airport, favored by the business elite and Bollywood stars.

Sahara said in a statement to Reuters the Aamby Valley project was valued at about 1 trillion rupees ($14.76 billion), citing a 2014 report of property consultant Knight Frank’s India unit.

India’s markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), which had asked the Supreme Court to order Sahara to repay millions of investors in its 2008-11 time deposit plan, has pegged the valuation of lands owned by Aamby Valley and its units at about 405 billion rupees ($5.95 billion).

The high valuation claim of Sahara contrasts with the flagging financial profile of the project: Aamby Valley posted an after-tax profit of 90 million rupees in the 12 months ended March 2013, compared with 694 million in the July 2011-March 2012 period, according to the latest figures from the regulator of companies in India. —

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