The Bangurs of Shree Cement, having salvaged a legacy, are putting their trust in innovation and peer dynamics: They're No 32
Patriarch Benu Gopal with grandson Prashant and son Hari Mohan at the Bangur family home
Image: Sumit Dayal for Forbes
Outside Shree Cement’s head office in Kolkata, bulging yellow Ambassador taxis jostle for space with belching, jam-packed, colourful buses on the one-way street, in sharp contrast to the staid, elegant, white colonial-era building where the executives sit. But it has been Shree’s ability to navigate chaos in a country where the company is the fastest-growing cement producer that has vaulted its owners, the Bangur clan, back into the top rungs of wealth.
They have been there before, at least according to company lore. Through the 1960s, when the Bangurs were a more diversified yet on some levels more united lot, they were among the top ten in a more modest India. Then came the kind of disruption and disunity that undermines many a family fortune. In surviving it, the difference for this clan was the decisiveness of Benu Gopal Bangur, now at age 85 the patriarch, and the follow-through of his son, Hari Mohan, now managing director.
Benu got the cement business in a split among brothers and cousins and built Shree around that core. Modern India, in turn, has made such building material and Shree’s ability to supply it at a favourable cost a source of renewed wealth. Twenty years ago, Shree Cement was a $56 million business. Today revenues exceed $1 billion. The market capitalisation has reached $8.7 billion, and Benu and his offspring hold 65 percent.
The Bangurs hail from the western state of Rajasthan, across the country from their current home in Kolkata, and are Marwaris—an ethnic group known for business and financial smarts. Benu credits this orientation for the 1906 move across India by his grandfather, Mugnee Ram, and a great-uncle: In colonial times, the port city of Kolkata was the centre of commerce and the capital of British India. The boys left behind a life of poverty.
Ram took up the brokering of milled jute, a key commodity obtained from what was then East Bengal. The onset of World War I led to speculation in such resources and, as Benu tells it, to his grandfather’s first 100,000-rupee fortune. He used that money to offer loans for land purchases, acquiring large parcels of land when borrowers defaulted.
By World War II, Ram had his own jute mill, which the British seized for military use, but the pre-independence 1940s took him around to India’s regional princes, hungry for industrial activity. In Gujarat and Rajasthan, Ram got dispensations for cement and textile plants. Both paid off handsomely for him: In an economy of shortages, if you could manufacture anything, it would sell.
This business boldness contrasted with an otherwise traditional attitude that discouraged foreign travel (taboo among Hindus of yore), prohibited women from working and kept children in close tow. (Bangur kids growing up in the 1960s hewed to the traditional dress of their elders, with young boys dressed in dhotis and their foreheads anointed).
(This story appears in the 23 December, 2016 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)