By Neha Bothra| Jun 5, 2023
In the first of a two-part series, the market veteran reminisces his first multibagger, decodes his X-factor, shares his art of stock picking, lists his top investment themes for long-term wealth creation, and talks about the 'magic' that could unfold in digital companies
[CAPTION]Raamdeo Agrawal, chairman and co-founder, Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Image: Joshua Navalkar
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Raamdeo Agrawal, chairman and co-founder of Motilal Oswal Financial Services, discovered his passion for the stock market in the early 1980s. “I fell in love with the stock market and realised that this is the place where I want to build my career,” he says in an exclusive interview on Forbes India Pathbreakers. In 1983, with no savings or contacts, Agrawal says he took the plunge, ventured into the world of equity investing, and never looked back.
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Agrawal is very bullish about India’s growth story. “I think private lenders have a very strong banking cycle as economic growth picks up. That appears to be one big area. Insurance and formalisation of savings is a big space. The sectors that have been hit recently, like automotive, are coming back. IT is the largest industry of India in terms of profit pool. Tech is not to be undermined. It has the biggest potential to make money. Right now, there is a disappointment because of the global recession but that will throw up an opportunity to buy some interesting companies in the next one-two years. The India story is building up. Infrastructure, cement, steel, consumer companies, and digital companies. The digital companies were expensive in 2021 and have been beaten out of shape. Some more companies will do an IPO [initial public offering]. I think there are ample opportunities to look at.”
Agrawal believes there is a big underlying opportunity to be tapped in this segment. “Some of these companies will become very large. Any internet business will be very consolidatory. For a very large opportunity you will have one or two companies. You will not have fifty or hundred companies the way it used to be. There is a large opportunity. Internet is very young.
Right now, it is about 12-13 years old, but in India it is only 5 years old. We haven’t seen much impact of internet companies yet. As we go forward it will keep evolving. It will also be a big opportunity for online companies that are able to exploit it to their advantage. This is a space from where you will get to see a new set of large companies coming. Very few companies are listed right now. You will get to see a lot of global companies coming. Software companies that will have Indian cost structure but global markets. That’s going to be the real game. Whether it is edtech, fintech, SaaS (Software as a Service) company where the cost structure will be in Bengaluru, but the clients will be all over the world. For a Rs300 crore cost structure you can have a billion-dollar revenue. That kind of magic is going to happen. It’s some time away but digital companies are going to be here and they will be large,” he opines.
(This is the first of a two-part series.)