Topic: Jignesh Shah -Thoughts have no boundaries Posted: 18/Sep/2006 at 9:37pm
Another great interview..
Ten years ago, Jignesh Shah was an
employee of the Bombay Stock Exchange. Three years ago, he was running
a small software company. Today, at 36, he runs the one of the 10
largest commodity exchanges in the world. In an interview with Sucheta
Dalal and Debashis Basu, he shares the story of his incredible growth,
strategy and vision. Here are the excerpts from an extremely inspiring
interview
ML: Let’s start from the
beginning. Tell us about your family background and your formative
years. Shah: I am from a very conventional business
family, but I was very clear that I would not want to go in for my family
businesses.
ML:What were
these? Shah: We were into trading of iron, steel
and chemicals, which started in 1960 when my ancestors came in from Gujarat and
based themselves at Kalbadevi, in Mumbai. I completed my schooling in Gujarati
medium and always stood amongst the first five in the class. I was very clear
that I would do engineering. I don’t remember why, but I was very clear that I
would do electrical engineering, after which I would go to the US, complete my
MS, work there and later start my own business. This was more or less fixed in
my mind at a very young age. If I look back at my school days, I can recall
that I was a voracious reader and, I think, this is what has contributed to my
success. Even today, I continue to read a lot. Among my priorities is to set up
a great library. In my school days, the library we went to was open from 8-10
in the morning and 5-7 in the evening. I was the first to reach there in the
morning. I would take a book, read it and then pass it on to my brothers
because there was only one card among the three of us, and only one book could
be borrowed on a card.
ML:What kind of books did you
read? Shah: Adventure books use to inspire me a
lot and I used to read autobiographies of industrialists and innovators
minutely. Even now, at least once a year, I re-read the biography of JRD Tata,
written by RM Lala. I was in a trance for three days when I read it the first
time. It had such a strong impact on me. The next book I re-read religiously is
Made in Japan by Akio Morita. I read these two again and again to get a kick.
If I can afford to, I will read for five hours and do business for three hours
everyday. Reading increases your knowledge and my work in the office today is
to translate knowledge into execution and business. I am fortunate enough to
complete my higher studies, but when you study the lives of these great
businessmen, it is as good as getting a Harvard degree. Unlike what many people
say, theory is very important. I get the theoretical framework from books. Then
I change it according to my needs. I need to change the implementation
depending on the times, because what was practical in 1995 is not practical
today.
To get back to my formative years, till 1984, there were only two colleges in
Mumbai offering courses in electrical, mechanical and civil engineering. In
1984, a new college opened, offering computer science, instrumentation and
electronics, and I felt that these were more important than the conventional
electrical stream. I thought electronics was the umbrella and everything was
below this umbrella, including computer science. It was a four-year course and
only in the last six months, you get your chosen special elective: electronics;
otherwise, for the first three years, the course is same for computer science
and electronics. My specialisation was in the highly specialised area of
digital designs of logics.
ML:So, where did you work after
you passed out? Shah: After I completed engineering, around
1989, Bombay Stock Exchange was starting their automation project. I was around
23. The main career options were to do MS abroad or join TCS and go on an H1
visa. But I read somewhere about this pan-India BSE project, which was budgeted
to cost Rs. 100 crore. I felt that while I can do MS or join TCS later, this
kind of opportunity to learn and implement will not come easily again. I
applied for a job in BSE. They took me as an electronic engineer to set up the
network. A 40-member team was selected in September 1990 and we were trained
intensely by global specialists. But BSE brokers were apprehensive about losing
out on commissions. They did not see that volumes would go up and more than
compensate for lower commissions.
Meanwhile, we felt that online trading will not work without automating other
functions such as clearing, surveillance, listing, etc. We did about 14 pieces
of automation. You would be surprised that I knew nothing about the stock
exchange business till I joined BSE.
ML:Really? Shah: Yes. Though I was hired for
networking, I started taking an interest in the working of the exchange, how
brokers transact, how liquidity is generated, the role of jobbers, etc. At that
time, we were told that even if we do automation, we could not eliminate the
jobbers. They had a powerful lobby. We were told to create neither a
quote-driven nor order-driven system but something of a hybrid system. These
discussions were going on and a system was being worked out, but the BSE did
not implement things on time.
In 1992, after the Harshad Mehta scam, the government was very emphatic that
things had to be automated. BSE created a team and send it abroad. I was part
of it. We were told to study various systems in US, UK, Hong Kong, etc. and
study their surveillance and trading systems.
Before that, let me talk about my earliest encounter with commodities. BSE had
a library called Seth Chunnilal library. I would go there and read books after
my work was over. I was also studying the business at that time. That is when I
discovered that in 1969 we banned commodity futures markets and commodity
brokers took BSE membership. So, the roots of trading were in commodities. One
can trace back in history to 15th century when commodity trading was
flourishing. I believe there were 300 commodity exchanges in India around the
Second World War. The market was pan-India and we were highly linked with the
global markets. I will give you an example - of cotton. Premchand Roychand, the
big trader, had once issued a cheque of Rs. 11.5 crore. In 1994, when we
calculated the present value, it worked out to Rs. 850 crore - a single pay-in
cheque of that much.
ML:Where did you read about
this? Shah: In the East India Cotton Association
library. If you go to the New York Board of Trade (then known as NYCE), you
will find a photograph of our Nagar Sheth of Indore in the museum gallery. And
even at 11.30 in the night, one used to find a group of 2000 people at
Kalbadevi waiting for the opening prices of the New York cotton market. This
was the vibrancy of the market and there were 300 such markets.
ML:How would people
communicate? Shah: People used to communicate through
telex and telephones. I read something really interesting about Premchand
Roychand. I discovered that he had hired a person in Japan to send him data
through the Morse code - one hour ahead! I was learning all this in 1991-92,
discovering how great commodity markets around the world had developed. I came
to strongly believe that apart from the US, India is the only country that has
a great tradition and culture of option and futures. When traders did not have
the money but they wanted to cover risks, they used options. They called it
Jota and Phatak.
Coming back to 1992, I went abroad to study these world markets. Dewang
Neralla, who was there with me (BE Computer Science), was an expert in writing
code and was deputed to Tandem machines, which were very popular in those days.
We came back after doing all that along with some courses here and there. I
then had an offer from Merrill Lynch, while he had an offer from Tandem. My
offer was for currency trading, and 1994 September was the time when we had to
submit the blueprint to BSE, which we did. BSE awarded the job to CMC. I told
Dewang that whatever we have learnt will not go in vain; and my ideas have
changed. I said neither finance nor technology is complete without the other.
Technology for finance is the way to go and so we called our company Financial
Technologies. I left BSE and started the company on 1st January 1995 with four
others: Dewang, Ghanshyam Rohira and two other programmers we had at BSE.
Ghanshyam was the mastermind in digital communication, Dewang was expert in
writing code for database and I had specialised in business logic. I said I
would take care of all other things.
We started with just Rs. 5 lakhs and I had taken the consent of my family that
I will not be able to contribute anything. I did say sometime ago, what was
right in 2005 may not be in 1995. Here is an example. Everybody was asking us
to do body shopping, but we were very clear that the time for body shopping was
1981, when Mr. Narayana Murthy started Infosys. In 1995, I thought that if I
start a business with body shopping as its DNA, I will be finished in three
years. So I might as well join Merrill Lynch now. So, we decided neither to do
body shopping nor any projects.
What we had was technology and general business knowledge. So, we did products.
Product means value for your innovation, which I will explain in a few minutes.
We decided to create technology for markets and we did not restrict ourselves
to equity because it was a high transaction density market and we had already
worked in the equity market for five years. There were commodity, currency and
bond markets. At that time, there was no depository, but we were determined to
focus on electronic transfer of stock or any asset class. And now, I will tell
you what we ideally wanted to do. In software, if we write the code and sell it
like all project companies do, that’s the end of it. I end up doing labour and
more labour. But what is the edge in that? Nothing.
When you sell a product, you are selling intellectual property; so you can sell
it to multiple customers, like Microsoft does. But again you are not fully
exploiting the technology. The ideal model (and I have not discovered anything
better) is doing something where your gain is linked to the value transacted.
Nothing else can give you a higher return. Imagine a product that is sold to a
bank for $5 million. Its market will be limited to the number of banks. Now,
imagine a different selling model for the same product - the income from the
product being linked to the transaction it processes.
That is a totally different model. The problem is, as a tech company if I go to
a banker and try to sell this, he will throw me out. Similarly, if I tell a
broker that here is a product, trade on it and give us a tiny part of the
transactions, no broker will agree. But exchanges are allowed to do exactly
that - charge on transaction basis. So we needed to be an exchange. But nobody
would allow a technology company to do this. So, we said, “Let’s prove
ourselves first”. We researched for three years, and on 29th April 1998, we
launched our first product, which allowed anybody to trade on the electronic
exchange with pre-defined criteria of risk management, which the broker wants.
Exchanges give a standard story for risk management, but it differs from broker
to broker. So we said, “Let’s do that”.
ML:How did you fund your
business? Shah: We started with a 250 square feet
office and that too on the mezzanine floor. It was like a research lab. Costs
were not that high. In 1995, electronic trading was in, so brokers needed
consultancy to set up the electronic dealing rooms and we did some of that. We
had some small products too - to make orders fly on e-mail and on a modem.
These were funding our business and whenever there was a gap I used to fund it
myself. So, for three years it was mainly research- related work.
ML:Three years is quite a long
time. Were you not tempted to take up a job? Shah: If we had taken up a job, we would not
have been able to do what we wanted to do; and if one were to do a job, it was
best to go to America, an option we had already rejected.
ML:What gave you the confidence
against so much of uncertainty? There was nothing like an exchange for you on
the horizon…! Shah: If certainties are high, one can
define it on an excel sheet. That is the difference between a blue-chip
business house, which will take a business call to venture into something with
predictability vis-à-vis an entrepreneur who will go by gut feeling. My call
was that you create technology and that technology should allow you to charge
in a different way. Now assume that we did not get a permission to set up this
exchange, how could we have achieved that model? It could have been something
like taking over the complete IT infrastructure, the back office, the
processing, even online trading and getting paid on a transaction basis for
back office support. This is what happens abroad. Payments for the front office
too are unlike what we have here. Here we sell licenses but abroad, they charge
you on a per-month basis. So, I thought, even if I can’t charge on a
per-transaction basis, I will neither be earning on a dollar per hour basis nor
even license fees. It will be something beyond. So, that was the starting point
but our dream was very clear - to set up an exchange.
When we launched our product, there was a company called TIBCO, which created
the first digital dealing room in America. It was started by an Indian called
Vivek Ranadive, who later sold out to Reuters in 1995 for a 100% cash deal
worth $100 million. Anyway, TIBCO was here to do automation and dealing room
for UTI securities. After we demonstrated our product to both BSE and NSE, it
was NSE, then headed by Dr. R.H. Patil, who gave us the first break.
ML:How did it
happen? Shah: Our product gave the broker a
sophisticated trading system. Some would use it for big proprietary trading,
some for huge analytics and some will use it for launching a large retail
network. But to do anything, the exchange has to empanel the vendor, that is
someone like us, based on technical skills, commercial standing and bank
guarantee. At that time, they took Rs. 50 lakhs as bank guarantee from all the
vendors. So, FT, TCS and Wipro were empanelled and we were the only company
that was very specialised in this field. That was our edge. We implemented the
system and I felt, “Let’s first create many success stories of our customers so
that we can demonstrate our capability. This will help us gain market share.”
So, while TIBCO was doing UTI securities, we went out and caught hold of these
new professional brokers like CAs, who had taken NSE memberships.
ML:Who was your first
customer? Shah: The first customer was in Surat,
called Growth Avenues. It does not exist now because I think it got merged with
IL&FS Investmart. We gave them the first retail chain in Surat. They used to
suffer from frequent interruptions of power, so they use car batteries to run
this big network. We took ICICI to show them this system and then over a period
we got break from ICICI, Sharekhan, etc. And then came the Internet boom and
that was the real turning point. IBM and we were in the final shortlist for the
business of ICICI Direct.
Arvind Joshi of ICICI was the CTO who came from Goldman Sachs. There were
marathon discussions and he said, “Jignesh, I can’t consider you because
whatever it is, you are a private limited company.” I showed him my track
record. At that time, Mr. K.V. Kamath had that 90 days target - he used to say
that either a project is done in 90 days or it is not. So, Arvind told me that
this is what Mr. Kamath says and I said, “If that is the case, I am the most
suitable candidate. In 90 days IBM will just prepare a paper report and you
want it to be launched.” There was a big competition between ICICI Direct and
Investmart to be the first to launch an Internet trading facility. So, I said,
“Why don’t you call both of us tomorrow morning at 10, and whoever can execute
an order from his system should get the project.” IBM couldn’t even connect to
the exchange. They had got a Belgium system. It normally does not work this
way, because it is like transplanting a kidney to a person whose blood group
does not match. Our order went through and we got the first break. I think that
was a big step for getting recognised in the institutional market. By 2001,
virtually every big name became our client and we became the No. 1 supplier.
ML:And did this become the
launching pad for the commodity exchange? Shah: Yes. In 2000, the government had given
a mandate to a consortium to set up a commodity exchange, which included NSE,
ICICI, Punjab Warehousing Corporation and M&M. For two years, nothing happened.
Then they decided to invite corporates to do this and so we applied. You won’t
believe it, the announcement came out as a press note that anybody interested
in setting up an exchange can apply. There were 17 criteria that were picked up
from the best of international exchanges, NSE and BSE. There were 16
applications including all major stock exchanges and a consortium of ICICI,
NSE, Nabard and LIC. The Forward Market Commission finally recommended four
names: ICICI, us, NMCE Ahmedabad, headed by Kailash Gupta, and NBOT of Indore,
which was the only regional exchange that was working. ICICI and ours were the
only professional ones, without a commodity background. When the final list
came, our proposal and ICICI’s (that is today’s MCX and NCDEX) were both thrown
out.
ML:Why? What did they
say? Shah: I went and asked the concerned officer
and he said, “Yours is in the proposal stage,” to which I said, “But you asked
for proposals, you can’t expect me to invest 30 crore without a license”. He
said, “No, we don’t want to take risks.” We aggressively followed up with the
economic advisor, secretary, joint secretary and the minister. The World Bank
consultant had also given a report that all four shortlisted ones should be
allowed to create healthy competition, and finally on 14th February 2003, we
made it. In the company, there were mixed views. They said NCDEX are giants,
but I said it is good that such large players are in the field. A lot of
industry development will happen.
We were like the Indian cricket team of 1983 in World Cup. I remember an
article at that time saying that the odd one in the list is Jignesh Shah, who
is neither a trader nor a banker. The article was written without even talking
to us. Though we were good in electronic trading on the equity side, people
would write us off as an exchange, saying you need size, track record, etc.
Ideally, it is the way you manage process, which is important. I was very clear
that the moment I get the permission, I would employ the best professionals
(like Joseph Massey) who have run exchanges and were my clients.
ML:What else contributed to your
success? Shah: Two or three strategic ideas. The fist
one was treating stock market and commodity market, as two different things.
Stockbrokers will not be able to create a commodity market. They will come when
the market is created and will make it bigger. So, even before starting, I tied
up with major commodity trade bodies. Second was the contract design itself. We
never copied foreign contracts. Everybody wanted to be the bullion exchange of
India. We said, “Rather than copying the famous 999, let’s study what gold is
being imported the most,” and we found out that it was 995; so we created a
contract for 995. Then we went to Zaveri Bazar in Mumbai and Meena Bazaar in
Delhi. We stayed there to market and promote it. The idea was to create an
electronic system, which is very affordable and yet offered all the things that
are best at NSE. Initial success came that way.
ML:Who were your first
members? Shah: There were 60 commodity business
people and 40 stockbrokers.
ML:What was the motivation for
the commodity people to come? Shah: In any association, 20% of people are
forward looking. They have seen the world and they understand the importance of
modern markets. At the same time they are powerful, doing big business and have
money. We took the trouble to go to them. If you ask me what is the difference
between the competition and us: this is one factor. We have really taken pains
to go to leaders of each segment, meeting them and giving them due respect, but
at the same time convincing them that this is the way forward. My main
competitor is a band of Nobody can then point a finger at MCX prices. All this
happened stage by stage and one and a half year after everything was in place,
NSE and Nabard, investors in NCDEX, also took equity in MCX, which underlines
our acceptability. People started taking us very seriously thereafter, even
though, thankfully, our business model was already ahead volume wise. Seven
nationalised banks, including Bank of India, Canara Bank, Union Bank, Bank of
Baroda, and Corporation Bank, also came in.
Despite the fact that India has neither convertibility nor options, nor
intangible settlement for contracts in foreign trades, FIIs can’t come into
commodities. MCX became the third largest exchange in the world in gold and the
second largest in silver in terms of value (largest in the number of contracts,
because our contracts are mini contracts, which were also one more innovation
suited to India.)
Today, we have more than 1000 brokers and have reached more than 500 cities,
thanks to the technology. This technology is very expensive abroad. If you take
a technology product abroad, they will ask you one simple question: what is
your home base? You cannot say, “I am a CMM level 5 or I have ISO.” They will
not buy. We can say that we have a 90% market share in our home country. We
have the most premium product in our country, our products being costlier than
that of TCS in our markets. This is what makes the foreigners interested.
MLWhat about the future? What
more are you planning and what will be your execution strategy? Shah: MCX was a demonstration of what we can
do and how value can be built. Today, we are among the first 10 exchanges
globally and have tie-ups with the best of exchanges in the world, a great
brand, created purely from scratch in three years. The story will be completed
when MCX gets listed. As for future plans, we are launching National Spot
Exchange for Agriculture Produce with Nafed, which will link agricultural
markets through technology. Our first step is to create Commodity Suchna
Kendra, which we will later enable with transaction capability. Anjani
Sinha heads this project now. The second business is ATOM (Any Transaction On
Mobile). I have CEOs running these projects. I keep a target of 1000 days for
each company to be up and running - learning from Mr. Kamath’s 90 days for
project completion (laughs). And I don’t take salary from MCX or have ESOP or
sweat equity. My income comes from FT.
We want to be a global company in digital transaction for which we need global
skill sets. We are recruiting the best of talent from around the world and
offering them a mix of professional compensation and entrepreneurial
opportunity. The best of people don’t just work for money anymore. We offer
money, challenge and a part of the ownership. With this strategy, I think, we
can compete well. Our competitor is really not NCDEX. In fact, I think from the
eastern part of the world, NCDEX and we should emerge as the biggest commodity
exchanges. Tokyo is not there in the global map, Singapore could not develop
their commodity exchange and exchanges in London are not expanding. India’s
domestic commodity base, technological skills, time zone advantage and trading
instinct - on all fronts, India is best placed to regain its important position
in the world of commodities.
"Investing is simple, but not easy." - Warren Buffet
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Posted: 10/Oct/2006 at 7:26pm
Thanks DeepInsight for that classic interview....This is one of the best one i have read recently....
I had met Jignesh once and he told exactly the same things to me ....Read Books.....He has tremendous knowledge of commodities markets...and he still lives in the same house, in which he lived in 1995....
You can't make money if you are unwilling to lose...It's like willing to breathe in but not willing to breathe out. -- ED SEYKOTA ....Read Disclaimer!
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Posted: 10/Oct/2006 at 7:58pm
Bubblevision- A few minutes with these kind of men is worth years of learning.
CatchSudipto- WHile I am not sure about the near term effects FT can get really big. Buy a small quantity and wait for declines.
'The Thoughtful Investor: A Journey to Financial Freedom Through Stock Market Investing' - A Book on Equity Investing especially for Indian Investors. Book your copy now: www.thethoughtfulinvestor.in
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Posted: 07/Jun/2007 at 5:36pm
Jignesh Shah on how he built MCX
When the story of India's commodity futures market is penned, one man who will occupy the pride of place will, doubtless, be Jignesh Shah.
Shah, the forty-year-old managing director and chief executive officer of India's largest commodity exchange: Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), lords over an empire he created in a decade.
It was his passion for innovation that prompted Shah to set up Financial Technologies India Limited (FTIL) at a young age, with his lifetime savings. Today, FTIL is one of India's leading financial solutions providers.
Stocks and commodity markets have always excited Shah, and his vision has always been to marry technology and the financial markets.
Excitement turned into reality when Shah set up MCX for commodity futures trading four years ago with a world-class technology backbone created by FTIL.
Since then, there has been no looking back for MCX. Today, MCX is the world's second largest exchange for silver and the third largest for gold: it clocked a record turnover of Rs 22,93,723.70 crore (Rs 22,937.237 billion) during the financial year 2006-07.
These days, Shah's office is flooded with requests from foreign financial institutions wanting to pick up stakes in the exchange. In between, Shah has been weaving a slew of global and domestic alliances, including setting up the Dubai Gold & Commodities Exchange and planning several spot exchanges across India.
Don't Miss! The amazing story of Jignesh Shah and MCX
"I have a global appetite for global commodities," says Shah in an exclusive interview to Commodity Online Special Correspondent Manorama Mehta.
How do you foresee the progress of MCX having achieved the numero uno position in terms of volumes?
We have always been placing ourselves in the global context. So it is not surprising that we continue to be number one. This is because we have been a technology-driven exchange with emphasis on cost efficiency and top quality service to our clientele.
Our rising volumes and benchmarking against global contracts are a result of our giving top priority to the needs and expectations of customers. While we have no reason to be complacent about our achievement, we would like to make it very clear that our geographical reach is not confined to any specific region.
We would like to develop and nurture the middle segment of the population that continues to be chary of entering the commodity space.
Do you see MCX being more active on the agriculture futures trading side?
As you may be aware, MCX has enjoyed top positions in terms of turnover in bullion, metals (particularly in copper, of late) and the energy sector. Our emphasis on agricultural commodities flows from our desire to benefit the Indian farmer while enhancing growth in these commodities.
We have emerged as business leaders in potato, kapas, soya oil, cardamom, coffee and menthol oil. These commodities have attracted high levels of open interest and are growing organically with the participation of physical market producers, consumers, processors and financial investors.
We will continue to focus on important agri commodities, generate organic growth and supplement our efforts in stepping up turnover in these commodities with our ceaseless efforts in educating participants such as farmers, small traders and individuals by extending our training programmes to them as a part of our ongoing process to clear the misconceptions about commodity trading on exchanges in India.
As such you will find that we have a global perspective as potato, soya oil and coffee are traded on international exchanges. We think and act globally.
What are your plans to step up the role of MCX in developing the market economy?
We have initiated a number of projects for the economic development of rural India and think that the very basic function of the futures market is to integrate production centres with consumption centres. This, in a way, bridges the divide between the rural and the urban economies.
One of the Financial Technologies' group companies, National Bulk Handling Corporation Ltd (NBHC), has created large warehousing capacities across the country, besides ensuring that farmers and traders obtain easy warehouse-based loans through banks NBHC has tied up with.
We have also made significant efforts in the establishment of National Spot Exchange (NSE) and Safal National Exchange (SNX) that link production centres with consumption centres for spot transactions. This apart, we conduct several training and awareness programmes on an ongoing basis at the rural level to enhance the understanding of farmers and traders and bring about their active participation in the commodity markets.
Collectively, when all the aforesaid projects come to fruition, a large amount of rural investment and employment opportunities will have materialised across the country.
When is MCX coming out with its Initial Public Offering? What are your expectations on foreign direct investment and domestic investment limits in commodity exchanges?
We expect the necessary policy in terms of investment limits to be in place in the very near future and, accordingly, our plans of an IPO and other growth strategies will be suitably implemented.
As an exchange and a technology provider what are the opportunities you foresee in the Indian market? What is your take on India's potential to become a leading player among the futures exchanges across the world?
Indian IP brands like Financial Technologies are driving global disruptive innovations by leveraging core technology and market domain leadership to create next generation enterprises like financial markets that are transparent, efficient and liquid and help unlock significant value at the middle and bottom of the socio-economic pyramid through inclusive and equitable growth in the economies they operate.
Financial markets for equities and commodities are great equalizers. Vibrant and liquid markets have globally proven to be effective disruptive platforms to help drive 'inclusive and equal' growth for not just the top but also to help unlock value from middle and bottom of the economic pyramid.
That is why it is important to take the markets and the benefits of markets to the heartland of India so we can achieve the agenda of 'inclusive' growth that will help transform the nation into a new India of our dreams -- a prosperous India of more equity and greater equality.
Let us be very clear that our being 'technology savvy' is not an end in itself. It is just an instrument in our efforts to be the top 'global exchange.' We do not think in terms of regional or fragmented markets either geographically or commodity-specific.
We have a totally integrated approach towards deepening and widening 'commodity space' globally. Therefore it is in order that our exchange business is structured in such a way that eventually we will emerge as global leaders in creating and operating a transparent, efficient and liquid exchange with the highest price performance value proposition across all asset classes -- commodities, currency and equities. That is why earlier we emphasized a totally integrated approach.
Now it is true India has an edge in software technology and tremendous growth potential. MCX has capitalised on its technological leverage by setting up six exchanges -- four in India and two overseas. Therefore, it is needless to add that it has been possible for us to penetrate markets in the middle of the pyramid that the existing players have ignored largely and that needs to be traversed.
It is a matter of just pride that all major brokerages use Financial Technologies suite of products. That is why we have been able to clock around 80 per cent market share in the securities and commodities trading segments.
We are modest about our achievements so far lest we are lulled into complacency. But we will not allow that thought to endanger our endeavour to reach the peak in global summit in exchanges. All our efforts in the future will be geared to fulfilling the ambition.
You have gone global by tying up with the Dubai and Mauritius governments to set up exchanges there. How have you achieved this success and what is the future course?
Having promoted a technology company and simultaneously having the experience of establishing and managing a commodity exchange eco-system in India has given us the advantage of replicating the success overseas. Accordingly, governments and institutions from a number of countries are contacting us and seeking our assistance, and we are helping them in similar initiatives.
Governments across nations feel the need to have a commodity exchange eco-system for their rural economies to grow better in a globalised environment. We are a technology-driven company with domain knowledge that meets their requirements for implementing cutting edge technology solutions that are so effective in managing markets.
What is strategy from Financial Technologies and its group companies to achieve newer heights in the future?
First you must understand that technology has underpinned our strategy. In fact, the FT group of companies are technology-driven entities spurred by ceaseless obsession with quality of service provided to our clientele. It is not for nothing that in just about three years our group has grossed over Rs 10,000 crore (Rs 100 billion) turnover from under Rs 10 crore (Rs 100 million). Now, please remember that it is not only technological leverage that has been instrumental for this achievement but our ceaseless efforts in what can be called spreading 'commodity culture' among a wide swathe of population.
Now you will realise why we focus on research and training programmes to educate all segments of population keen on participating in commodity sector. Our latest initiative Project Pragati (an MCX-Rotary International joint venture) aims at creating awareness among rural youth about tremendous career opportunities and wealth creation in commodity space in the countryside.
While the 90s was the decade of equities, we would like to make the next few decades the age of commodities. Now you will understand why we are positioning ourselves as a global player.
Let us add that our endeavour will be to fashion ourselves into a technology company focused on (Intellectual Property Rights), IPR, creation in the financial markets and trading sector by harvesting intellectual capital. Now you will appreciate why we fan out globally to trawl in talents to achieve our targets.
It is simply 'horses for courses.' It naturally follows that we are building a brand to match the best in global commodity and financial space to leverage quality products to generate sustainable and assured annuity revenues. Perhaps, as is the vogue, 'a model,' if you will, that leverages a strong technological platform to promote transaction intensive multi-billion-dollar business.
Even while doing all this, please remember that our entire emphasis will be on a triad of technology, transparency and trust that will truss up our strategy and approach. We would like to build a commodity market with morality, with a global perspective in mind.
That is why it is needless to add that we are extending our geographical reach across the country and beyond it blurring the boundaries that fragment the markets. That is not, however, an easy task. We are aware that development of spot and futures markets hinges on a well spread out network of warehousing and storage to be manned by new-generation professionals.
That is why MCX focuses on training and awareness programmes to achieve this objective. Research and development will supplement these efforts and give us an edge in product development in the global context.
/******* the stock touched new 52 week high... from 65 pe..to 150 pe..stock still rewarding the owners*/
If you aren't fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.
Joined: 24/Oct/2006
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Posted: 12/Jun/2007 at 5:06pm
The amazing story of Jignesh Shah and MCX
October 13, 2005
The meeting with Jignesh Shah, managing director, Multi Commodity Exchange of India, is scheduled for 4 p.m., and begins at five past. The man is not just prompt, he makes spending 90 minutes with a journalist seem like no effort at all. (He is extremely media friendly and projects an impeccable corporate image.)
This, despite him telling me later that he works a 15-hour day, and I suspect they are often longer. There's enough hyperactivity in the commodity markets to justify it.
Trading volumes in commodity futures surpassed capital market futures in August for the first time in the history of domestic derivatives, and average daily trading volumes have crossed the Rs 10,000 crore (Rs 100 billion) mark. MCX is in the thick of it.
Indications of the nature of the business are up for all to see. The walls of the swanky front office are covered in photographs of commodities like sunflower, rice, sugar and -- as he emphatically points out -- gold. Bullion is its blue-eyed commodity and, along with energy, forms the largest chunk (70-80 per cent) of its trade volumes.
"Let me tell you," he starts off, "when Financial Technologies (FTIL, the financial product company that promotes MCX) applied for a commodity exchange licence in 2002, we were up against biggies like the Bombay Stock Exchange.
The media decided I, neither a trader nor a banker, was least likely to get government approval; besides what did a technology company have to offer? Not only did we get the in-principle approval, we went live in a record nine months on November 10, 2003. That was my first show of might."
Jignesh Shah was always a go-getter, even when he was just eight. "My mind was made up when I was in second grade. I knew I wanted to do engineering, go abroad, set up my own business," he explains. Incidentally, Shah also met his wife when he was in the second grade. Prodigious times in the life of an eight-year-old.
So engineering it was, although the conventional options of mechanical and electrical engineering gave way to electronic and telecommunications. Shah says, "Normally, the route would have been either the United States for MS or to join a branded technology company like TCS."
But Shah, as is evident, was not one for taking the road well travelled. "I chose, instead, to join the BSE on Project BOLT (Bombay Online Trading System), an ambitious Rs 100 crore (Rs 1 billion) project to automate the exchange.
However, the project was transferred mid-process to CMC (an IT solutions company), but not before Shah, and his eventual partner and executive director at FTIL, Dewang Neralla, had a chance to witness how technology has revolutionised capital markets from stints at the Hong Kong and Tokyo stock exchanges, and NASDAQ.
"The technology we had developed for BSE lay with us, unutilised, so the obvious move was to put it to good use elsewhere," explains Shah. Again he saw beyond the immediate horizon, and turned down an offer to work on the Merrill Lynch New York Foreign Exchange trading platform.
In 1995, with Shah as the dreamer and Neralla as the architect, they set about starting a financial product company that would not just restrict itself to trading systems for equity, but create products that "would attack all high transaction density markets, whether commodity, equity, currency or bond."
"Until then, technology in India was predominantly a skilled manpower supply story but we were going to create products that were a means to an end, not an end in itself. Our sights were set on transaction markets," explains Shah.
From a starting capital of Rs 500,000, self-funded by Shah mortgaging his home, FTIL grew from five work terminals to a 5,000 strong workforce and covered 80 per cent of the domestic base, powering practically every major Indian Internet site during the Internet boom.
It is hard to ignore the fact that Shah is very proud of his management team. He names them in rapid succession, rattling off their credentials; he knows it like the back of his hand. (In fact, names, numbers, dates are all at the tip of his tongue -- the man's memory almost seems technology driven itself).
When asked what luxury he can afford today that he couldn't 10 years ago, luxury watches and prized art find no mention.
Instead, he replies, "I always had dreams of hiring the best, and being able to afford pay scales that outmatched all others. Today I can afford to not compromise on salaries when it comes to hiring and retaining the best."
Back to 2002, and not one to be content with one success story, FTIL was making its next big move. It decided that currency markets were the place to be, so it applied to the Reserve Bank of India, demonstrated its capabilities and got the licence for an inter bank foreign exchange trading platform, IBS-Forex.
Today, Financial Technologies controls 30 per cent of the market. "Of course, the currency market is at a nascent stage; when it opens up, there will be huge opportunities for us to convert," he says, with a glint in his eye.
It was around the same time, in 2002, that after a 33-year long hiatus, commodity trading was finally back in sight. "Starting up a commodities exchange was a cherished dream," says Shah.
That is not surprising; before retiring to spiritualism, his father was a conventional iron and steel trader in the '50s and '60s. "We were the only listed company promoted exchange at the time. My aim was clear -- to make India the finest commodity trading hub between Tokyo and New York."
"We were reinforced in our faith when SBI took strategic equity partnership with an 18 per cent equity stake along with seven subsidiary banks, which led the way for other nationalised banks like HDFC and NABARD." Shah is particularly proud that Reliance took preferential equity; he is seemingly a great fan of Mukesh Ambani's acumen and perspicacity.
"We have a global appetite for global commodities", he says, "Today, MCX is the second largest exchange in silver in the world, the third largest in gold and the only one to trade Rs 1,000 crore (Rs 10 billion) of crude a day. We have consciously chosen our basket of commodities, commodities that had enough depth for us to dig our heels into, and allowed trading to the daily volumes of Rs 50,000 crore (Rs 500 billion)".
Now's the time to talk competition; currently MCX is second to NCDEX (National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange) in trade volumes.
Shah appears somewhere between being a little defensive and a little unruffled, stating, "We made profits in the first year, declared a 10 per cent dividend, had a Rs 30 crore (Rs 300 million) top-line, paid Rs 4.5 crore (Rs 45 million) in tax and registered a Rs 11.5 crore (Rs 115 million) net profit. Our 2004-05 balance sheets couldn't look stronger; our financial ratios are comparable to the National Stock Exchange and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange."
"Look, there are 140 agri-commodities and 1,400 industrial commodities; there is enough space for more than one exchange," he continues. Shah dismisses benchmarking success against daily volumes as hyperbole; he talks innovation.
"Every step we have taken has been copied by a competitor in 3-6 months. There should be a regulated cooling period, which protects someone investing in innovation. Otherwise there is no incentive to be innovative because the second player always has the advantage," he adds with a touch of bitterness.
Shah rattles off a list of "firsts" that MCX has achieved; he is keen to promote his laurels but not one to rest easy on them. Last November, MCX announced a strategic collaboration with the London Baltic exchange to launch freight futures contracts.
In September, MCX and the Chicago Climate Exchange signed a licensing agreement to offer the first environmental products to be traded in the subcontinent. Next month, trading will begin at DGCX (Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange) in a joint venture between the Dubai government and MCX, with MCX becoming the first commodities exchange to co-own a foreign exchange.
MCX also has to its credit the setting up of the first national spot exchange, NSEAP, which interlinks all-India APMC (agriculture produce market committee) markets electronically. The network established by NSEAP and MCX will be used by producers for spot trading in commodities.
Shah says, "Finally the farmer will benefit. I am not an economist but I understand this much that if I am able to double farmers' incomes, not only will the quality of their lives improve, money will come back into the economy."
In a few months time, there could be a large swell of capital in MCX's favour. In September it announced its decision to float an initial public offer, to raise approximately Rs 330 crore (Rs 3.3 billion) to fund infrastructure expansion, making it only the third commodities exchange in the world to do so.
It's ironic that a man who is so bullish when it comes to his work turns reticent when the topic turns to his personal life. It is clear he is a family man, but it is unclear how much they get to see of him. "For 10 years I didn't take a holiday. When FTIL turned 10 this year, I took my family to Switzerland," he says.
At other times they have to be content with short weekend breaks at their family home in Khandala. Does he have the time for trivial personal pursuits? "I love Hindi movies," laughs Shah.
He does own a Mercedes Benz because he believes it projects the right image for the company, adding, "I am very particular about the clothes my senior management wear out of the office; I have insisted they all get suits stitched with the finest fabric from Gabbana (not to be confused with Dolce & Gabbana, this one is the uncontested premier aspirational clothing store for Mumbai's business community).
Jignesh Shah is a curious mix of genuine prudence and Gatsby-esque aspiration. For a man whose personal fortune is in the region of Rs 2,000 crore (Rs 20 billion), some might find it surprising that he lives in the same flat he bought on an HDFC home loan 20 years ago in the middle class Mumbai suburb of Kandivili. His idea of a treat is still the Gujarati thali at the very affordable Chetna restaurant.
"We're a company that believes in optimal utilisation of resources. We work towards the greatest good of our shareholders so we operate with high financial prudence." That's him as a socialist, but the capitalist is never too far: "But the world likes to see capitalism, so a king must behave like a king."
And his image will continue to have to grow in stature to match the potential escalation of FTIL's achievements. Says Shah, "We are getting into mobile-based digital transactions for micro credit; it is a trillion dollar market. It will capture all low-end transactions, mobilising small money at a quarter of the cost. When media turns completely digital, we will be there too. I have a library with 5,000 books on various complex market opportunities that FTIL can get into when the time is right. We will create billion dollar stories out of million dollar ones. We are players in a high-speed, high-stakes game, we can't stop now."
For a man whose biggest luxury is spending time with his 12-year-old daughter, time is scarce enough without imposing on it, so I took my cue to leave but not before he quotes from, what else, a Hindi movie, Tezaab. "The hero's friend asks him, Tumhe itna time kaise hota hain? to which he replies, Time hota nahin hai, nikalna padta hain. The only difference is that he was talking about having time for his girlfriends," he laughs.
For the next nine days Shah will have to somehow find the time… to pick up the pace and dance to the tune of not the markets but the garba beat. With Navratri here, Shah is celebrating it, as he does every year. In style.
Shah on Shah
My mind was made up when I was in second grade. I knew I wanted to do engineering, go abroad, set up my own business
I always had dreams of hiring the best. Today I can afford to not compromise on salaries when it comes to hiring and retaining the best
Every step we have taken has been copied by a competitor in 3-6 months
Of course, the currency market is at a nascent stage; when it opens up, there will be huge opportunities for us to convert
The world likes to see capitalism, so a king must behave like a king
Voices
He is a great strategist and driven by results. MCX is going to take commodity futures a long way with its path-breaking work. I have known him since 1995, and he is someone who really believes in nurturing long-lasting relationships.
Anand Rathi, former BSE president
I have known Jignesh since 1998, when he first sought my advice on starting a commodities exchange. In 2003, when his application was approved, I was invited on board as an advising economist. I made several suggestions that they paid heed to, like starting off big with gold bullion; no other exchange was trading in it at the time. I also laid stressed building strategic partnerships with single commodity exchanges, which again they did. I did advise them to go slow, but Jignesh believes in exponential growth. He dreams, thinks, speaks and does BIG.
Dr Madhoo Pavaskar, consulting economist and government appointed director on MCX
Working at National Stock Exchange for over eight years, I'd been hearing of Jignesh Shah and his success with FTIL. He was the emerging entrepreneur everybody in the capital markets was talking about. I had decided by 2003 that he was the leader I wanted to grow with. Having worked under him for two and a half years, I truly believe he will not only emerge a national leader, but a globally benchmarked leader. He really sets the precedence in the organisation for transparency, team building and innovation.
Girish Raipuria, vice president-trading, MCX
We started working together on project BOLT. He was the visionary who thought 10 years ahead of time. His tremendous qualities are his ability to be customer and quality focussed, down to the last detail. He can make anything a commercial success because he drives growth with a missionary zeal.
Dewang Neralla, executive director and chief technology architect, FTIL
If you aren't fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.
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