After an acquisition binge, Opto Circuits’ Vinod Ramnani is looking to grow from within
Award: NextGen Entrepreneur for the Year
Name: Vinod Ramnani, CMD, Opto Circuits
Age: 56
Why He Won: For methodically moving up the value chain from non-invasive medical products to high-tech branded devices. For building a research-driven cross-border organisation.
“In three years, we want to be $1 billion [Rs 5,400 crore] in revenue,” says Valiveti Bhaskar, CFO, Opto Circuits. From its current revenues of nearly $440 million (about Rs 2,376 crore), that implies a growth of over 2.2 times.
A stretch target like that would have been eminently possible in the past for Vinod Ramnani, 56, the canny, reticent and measured co-founder and CMD of Opto Circuits.
After a modest IPO in 2000 for the company he started in 1992, Ramnani spent the next 10 years slowly but surely taking it from being just an unknown OEM (original equipment manufacturer) supplier of pulse oximeters—external medical devices that measure oxygen levels in the blood—to something much bigger. “He has the equal ability to spot timely opportunities or pass up on hyped trends,” says a financier who has worked with Ramnani for well over a decade now.
From 2001, Ramnani started acquiring companies, starting small and in India, before acquiring those in Europe and the US for much larger sums. By 2010, he had turned the Bangalore-headquartered Opto Circuits into a fairly formidable healthcare products company on the back of 10 acquisitions. From relatively simpler products, like patient monitors, Ramnani moved Opto Circuits up the value chain to stents, ECG machines and defibrillators. Each of the acquired companies was solid and profitable, throwing out predictable cash flows in short order. None were flashy or hyped up.
India, meanwhile, would serve as the base for low-cost manufacturing and access to capital. To keep investors happy, Ramnani announced bonus share offers almost every year. For instance, a single Opto Circuits share from 2002 would be 17 today.
At the same time, he also returned to the same investors much of the cash generated from his operations every year as dividend. The amounts weren’t small, with payouts ranging from 30-40 percent. It is only in recent years that it came down, falling to 14.9 percent in 2012.
But since early this year, Opto Circuits, which remained the perennial stock market darling for most of its listed life, fell out of favour with investors. Its stock was down 34 percent since April compared to the 6.5 percent that the BSE Sensex gained.
After a debt-fuelled, decade-long acquisition binge, investors now want Ramnani to take it easy. And Ramnani, who hasn’t made an acquisition since 2010, isn’t in any hurry. “We have stopped looking at acquisitions. We have to digest the ones we’ve already done.”
The next phase of Opto Circuits’ growth will have to come from within. Organically.
Organic Is in Fashion
“Our portfolio is now broad enough to support significant organic growth, which is why we now want to maximise returns through organic growth,” says Thomas Dietiker, a co-founder and promoter of Opto Circuits.
With further debt and acquisitions off the table for the next couple of years, Ramnani is adopting a dual-pronged strategy of organic growth and cost-cutting to remain in the good books of his investors. “We want each of our group companies to introduce at least one new product every year,” says Jayesh Patel, also a co-founder and promoter.
Many of the new products are being created or targeted specifically at countries like India, China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Brazil and a few from Africa. “In the US, clinical trials and [FDA] approvals can take a lot of time. So our focus will be on the European, Asian and Latin-American markets instead, where just a ‘CE approval’ [the European quality control mark] is enough,” says Ramnani.
(This story appears in the 12 October, 2012 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)