Why Mindtree is an attractive prospect for those in the fray to buy out Café Coffee Day founder VG Siddhartha's stake in the company

For the quarter ended December 31, Mindtree’s revenues rose 17.4 percent over the corresponding period in the previous year, to touch $251.5 million. This puts the company on the trajectory to become a billion dollar company by revenues.
(From left) Parthasarathy NS, executive vice chairman & COO; Subroto Bagchi, non-executive director; Krishnakumar Natarajan, executive chairman, and Rostow Ravanan, CEO & MD
Ravanan’s view—and it’s reasonable to expect that it is also the view of all the founders—is clear: “We are not losing sleep that somebody can come and take over and change the trajectory of the company.” And the company has tackled “far more challenging” situations in the past, Natarajan said in a recent video posted on the company’s website.
There have been shareholding changes in the past. For instance, in 2009 the largest shareholder at the time, Capital International, sold its stake. In 2011, Ashok Soota, the company’s first founder-CEO, left and sold his stake. “Nothing happened,” says Ravanan. “We have a great relationship with Siddhartha, for over 20 years he has been a supporter of Mindtree and we are confident he is not going to do anything that in any way damages the interests of Mindtree.” Therefore, other than managing the downstream noise, and the staff morale and customer sentiment, it’s business as usual.