Bloomberg
A 78 percent drop in Yes Bank Ltd shares since August has left founder and former chief executive officer Rana Kapoor some $1 billion poorer.
The Indian lender, which reported earnings that showed its capital buffers had weakened and bad loan ratio widened, plunged as much as 20 percent.
That’s contributed to a drop in Kapoor’s net worth to $363 million from $1.4 billion on August 20, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Kapoor, 61, built Yes Bank into India’s fourth-largest private lender over the 15 years since he co-founded the firm in 2004, until the central bank forced him out amid a controversy over bad-debt accounting. New CEO Ravneet Gill, a Deutsche Bank AG veteran, is now grappling with the knock-on effects of a crisis among India’s shadow lenders, thanks to Yes Bank’s sizable exposure to the cash-strapped industry.
Kapoor owns just over 10 percent of Yes Bank shares, including through his two holding companies, Yes Capital (India) Pvt and Morgan Credits Pvt. Last year, he pledged never to sell his shares, vowing to pass them on to his daughters.
Kapoor declined to comment on the effect of the share price drop on his wealth.
The value of those assets could be eroded further if new analyst forecasts for Yes Bank come true. Describing the results as “far worse than we had anticipated,†Jefferies analysts led by Nilanjan Karfa cut their price target for the bank to 50 rupees from 80 rupees. That would imply a drop of 40 percent from current levels.
Since Gill took over in January the era of rapid growth in Yes Bank’s loan book has ended, and the bank is faced with the need to raise new capital at a time when the share price is under pressure. Under Kapoor, total assets of the bank grew at a compound annual growth rate of 34 percent in the 10 years through March 2018, outpacing its peers among Indian banks.