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PROBLEM III

Features of the organisation are out of alignment, parts of the organisation are working at
cross purposes, alignment activities- interventions- are developed to get things back “in
sync”.

ARVIND MILLS – TEXTILE SECTOR


INTRODUCTION
Arvind Mills was promoted in June 1931, by Sanjay Lalbhai's grandfather, Kasturbhai
Lalbhai, and his two brothers, Narottam and Chimanbhai, in Ahmedabad. When Sanjay
Lalbhai took over the reins in 1975, Arvind Mills was at the crossroads.

By the late 1990s, Arvind Mills was the third largest manufacturer of denim in the world,
with a capacity of 120 million metres. Therefore, in the early 1990s, Arvind Mills initiated
massive expansion of its denim capacity.

Problems that started in Arvind Mills -

A high wage structure, low productivity and surplus labor in the textile mills rendered its
businesses unviable in most the products categories in which it competed. The emergence of
power looms in the 1970s further exasperated the problems of Arvind Mills. The
government's indirect tax system at that time also reduced the profitability of its product
lines. In the mid 1980s, Arvind Mills switched to high-quality fabrics requiring technical
superiority that the power looms could not hope to match.

In the late 1990s, due to global as well as domestic overcapacity in denim and the shift in
fashion, denim prices crashed and Arvind Mills was hit hard. The expansion had been
financed mostly by loans from domestic and overseas institutional lenders.

As the denim business continued to decline in the late 1990s and early 2000, Arvind Mills
defaulted on interest payments on every loan, debt burden kept on increasing. In 2000, the
company had a total debt of Rs 27 billion, of which 9.29 billion was owed to overseas
lenders.

Arvind Mills' expansion strategy resulted in the company's poor financial health in the late
1990s. In the mid 1990s, Arvind Mills' undertook a massive expansion of its denim capacity
in spite of the fact that other cotton fabrics were slowly replacing the demand for denim.

The expansion plan was funded by loans from both Indian and overseas financial institutions.
With the demand for denim slowing down, Arvind Mills found it difficult to repay the loans,
and thus the interest burden on the loans shot up. In the late 1990s, Arvind Mills ran into deep
financial problems because of its debt burden. As a result, it incurred huge losses in the late
1990s. The company's credit rating had also come down. CRISIL downgraded it to "default"
in October 2000 from "highest safety" in 1997.
In early 2001, Arvind Mills announced a restructuring proposal to improve its financial health
and reduce its debt burden. The proposal was born out of several meetings and negotiations
between the company and a steering committee of lenders.

Steps taken - Then Arvind Mills went for debt-restructuring plan for the long-term debts.
The restructuring was overseen by Mr Jayesh Shah, CFO and advised on by a JP Morgan
Hong Kong team, led by Mr Ahmad Ayaz.

New markets were created, technology was upgraded, and looking at rationalising their
suppliers and competition was also tackled.

In 2003 - For the fourth quarter, Arvind Mills witnesses 280% growth in the net profit

Arvind Mills Ltd is assigned a `P1+` rating by CRISIL, which indicates a very strong rating
for their commercial paper.

In 2004 - Company turns itself around showing remarkable improvement in financial


performance. This was done only when all the parts of the organisation started back to be in
sync. The decisions were taken accordingly so that every activity in the organisation are
aligned. It was necessary to do so as they don’t face the same problem that they have faced
earlier of non-repayment of loans which they had taken for capacity expansion.

In 2005 - For the fourth quarter in a row, Arvind Mills has managed to post a profit growth in
excess of 80 per cent.

History has been witness to the Arvind Group’s commitment to excellence, innovation,
perseverance and undying attention to customer and societal needs. As an organization,
Arvind has successfully integrated diverse businesses, services and products, unified by a
common vision - of enriching lifestyles.

Policy of change has fetched the company to well deserved results. Arvind Mills’s adoption
of new-age fabrics has seen the Company emerge as one of the largest denim manufacturers
in the world, while also bringing us global recognition for the manufacture of shirting, khakhi
and knitted fabrics.

Currently Arvind Mills has a strong Research and Development focus on process
improvement, cost reduction and new product development. Arvind Mills continuously
modifies its production process to enhance flexibility on the use of various types and quality
of cotton. To further meet customer needs, Arvind Mills has also introduced a new dyeing
and processing method for denims.

State-of-the-art technology and equipment have made Arvind Mills one of the top three
producers of denim in the world, paving the way for the Company to emerge as a global
textile conglomerate. This cutting edge position comes to Arvind Mills courtesy technologies
such as Open-end Spinning, Foam Finishing, Mercerizing, Slasher-dyeing, Rope-dyeing, Air-
Jet, Projectile and Wet Finishing. It’s only natural that Arvind Mills’s quality fabrics are in
high demand in the markets of Europe, US, West Asia, the Far East and Asia Pacific.

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