It is déjà vu for veteran banker Vikram Limaye, who will have to draw from his experience of navigating IDFC out of troubled waters to face uncannily similar challenges as NSE's new boss: An organisation beset with top management exits and, yet, preparing to go public
Vikram Limaye spent several years in the US, first doing an MBA at Wharton and then working at Wall Street, before returning to India. After a decade long successful stint at IDFC, he -- as NSE's new managing director and CEO -- is confident of taking the exchange to greater heights.
Image: Joshua Navalkar
On July 17, 2017, a confident-looking Vikram Limaye walked through the lobby of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) in Mumbai’s busy BKC commercial hub—files, papers and a bag in hand—to take charge as managing director and CEO of the exchange. His confidence would appear misplaced to most.
The 50-year-old veteran banker has a daunting, possibly even unenviable, job at hand—to turn around the fortunes of a now-troubled exchange. The NSE has seen two high-profile exits at the top management level and is facing a probe from market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) for allegedly giving preferential access to some brokers for its co-location servers for algorithm trades—this has even delayed NSE’s plans for a listing.
Certainly, a furrowed brow would not seem out of place.
There was none of that. Nor was there any over-exuberance. Instead, there was purpose. Limaye had been preparing for this role since early February, after having been chosen NSE chief by a selection panel and approved by the board of the exchange. The final clearance from Sebi came in June.
The few months in the interim helped him hit the ground running. Take his Day One: The new CEO shot an email to all NSE employees, saying he was optimistic about the future of the institution and that despite the challenges it faces, he was confident that these issues will be overcome. This was followed by a meeting with senior business heads; a two-hour town hall with all employees, a quick interaction with the media, a meeting with Sebi (to discuss improving trading volumes at the GIFT City, the under-construction smart central business district in Gujarat) and then another exchange meeting to discuss internal processes.
A flurry of activity isn’t new to Limaye. In fact, the circumstances in which he has taken charge at NSE are similar to those when he joined IDFC as executive director in March 2005. “There was a management void at IDFC and there was a requirement to take IDFC public due to a shareholder agreement,” Limaye says. Now, he adds, “There is a management void at the NSE, there are some credibility issues which need to be addressed and the institution needs to be taken public.”
Limaye, a chartered accountant, had come back to India in 2004 after a decade in the US, first doing an MBA at Wharton, and then working on Wall Street for eight years with Credit Suisse First Boston in a variety of roles in investment banking, capital markets, structured finance and credit portfolio management.
Limaye is seen as an institution builder. He has begun building employee morale
(This story appears in the 18 August, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)