By focusing on the US market, and exporting value-added shrimps directly to large retail clients, the P Brahmanandam-led company has carved a lucrative niche for itself
P Brahmanandam at the DSF production facility at Tanuku in the West Godavari district of Andhra Pradesh
Image: P Ravikumar for Forbes India
In the early 1990s, P Brahmanandam, who was a civil constructions contractor in Visakhapatnam, received an offer from a friend who owned fishing trawlers. Given the surplus cash he had from his business, would Brahmanandam be interested in investing in the lucrative marine export industry? He said he would.
After pooling in their own money, and taking a ₹25-lakh loan from Union Bank of India, the two friends started Devi Sea Foods (DSF) out of a leased facility in 1992, with the intention of buying shrimps from local farmers and selling them in the international market.
Brahmanandam, who joined the company as its managing director (and remains so), quickly realised how high the margins were, and DSF turned profitable in a few months. In 1997, he bought out the 50 percent share his friend—whom he declined to name—had, and took full control of the company.
By 1997, DSF had established itself in the Japanese market, with clients such as Mitsubishi Corporation and Hitachi Corporation, and was training its sights on the US market, one of the biggest markets for Indian shrimp exports. For this, he approached an old Australian client. In 1996, says Brahmanandam, this client, then a small-time shrimp importer, wanted to return a batch of DSF shrimps because they were sub-standard, and he had readily agreed. By the time Brahmanandam was thinking of entering the US market, the Australian client had turned into a major vendor for Orlando-based Darden Restaurants, which owns eight restaurant chains in the US and Canada with 1,536 outlets and sales of $6.93 billion in 2016. He helped Brahmanandam get in touch with them. In 1999, DSF started supplying processed shrimps to Darden Restaurants.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE STORIES FROM THE 'BOOTSTRAPPED SPECIAL' SPECIAL REPORT
Focusing on the US market has been the key to DSF’s growth. In around two decades of entering the market, the company’s turnover has reached ₹1,231 crore, clocking a net profit of ₹64.66 crore (as of March 31, 2017); on an average, other Indian shrimp exporters have a turnover of ₹600 crore.
Over the years, DSF has grown through internal accruals and not needed external capital in terms of debt or equity. “We never needed to look for capital as the business has been generating cash from year one. We have managed to fund all our expansion through our internal accruals,” says Brahmanandam, 64. “If the company can manage with internal finances, there is no need to go for external equity. DSF is not averse to external equity and debt. But you need to be equally responsible and disciplined about it, whosoever’s money you are using.”
By sticking to its core business, DSF has made efficient use of capital, which can be measured in its high return on equity (RoE). Between 2012 and 2017, its net worth has gone up from ₹103 crore to ₹326 crore, with a consistent RoE of 20 percent.
“ I think what has really worked is that Brahmanandam is a people’s person and the first thing that he looks at is the value-addition or benefit that he can create for other people.
(This story appears in the 18 August, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)