https://www.bloomberg.com/search?query=ramdev 
https://www.bloomberg.com/search?query=ramdev

 

 Excerpts:
 

 Twenty-three years ago, when he was a poor young yoga instructor living at the 
foot of the Himalayas, Baba Ramdev pledged to spend the rest of his life as a 
sanyasi—a Hindu ascetic. He forswore possessions and renounced the material 
world.
  
 But today he can be found in the most material of places. Turn on an Indian 
TV, and there’s Ramdev, a supple yoga megastar in saffron robes, demonstrating 
poses on one of the two stations he oversees. Flip the channel, and there’s 
Ramdev in commercials selling shampoo and dish soap. Walk any city on the 
subcontinent, and there’s his face in stores selling the wares of Patanjali 
Ayurved Ltd. https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/0491151D:IN"; style=" 
border-top-color:initial;border-right-color:initial;border-left-color:initial;font-variant:inherit;font-weight:inherit;font-stretch:inherit;
 line-height:inherit;, the multibillion-dollar corporation he controls.
  
 Ramdev has said his goal is to sell an ayurvedic item, based on India’s 
ancient medical traditions, for every household need: toothpaste made from 
cloves, neem, and turmeric; hand soap made from almonds, saffron, and tea tree 
oil; floor cleaner made from the “natural disinfectant” cow urine. Since 2012, 
Patanjali’s revenue has climbed twentyfold, from $69 million to $1.6 billion. 
It’s the fastest-growing company in Indian consumer goods, and Ramdev predicts 
he will overtake the subsidiaries of multinational giants such as Nestlé SA 
https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/NESN:SW and Unilever NV 
https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/UNA:NA as soon as next year. “The ‘gate’ in 
Colgate will shut,” he once gloated. “Pantene will wet its pants, the lever of 
Unilever will break down, and the little Nestlé bird will fly away.”
  
 It might seem like an impossible arrangement—observing an oath of poverty 
while also being one of India’s top entrepreneurs. But Ramdev is a master of 
contortion. Patanjali is an omnipresent brand in India, and though everyone 
refers to it as Ramdev’s company, he’s not technically its owner or chief 
executive officer. It would be scandalous for a sanyasi to profit from a 
corporation, and Ramdev neither owns shares nor takes a salary. He says his net 
worth is zero. The company calls him merely its “brand ambassador,” a title 
that belies his power.
  
 “If you had to choose the top five living extraordinary Indians, people who 
have changed the landscape,” says Chiki Sarkar, publisher of New Delhi’s 
Juggernaut Books, “Ramdev would make the list.”
 

 ..
 

 
 Ramdev’s behavior also started to trouble Karamveer, his fellow yoga 
instructor. “Idealism is easy when you have nothing,” Karamveer told 
Pathak-Narain. “It’s what you do when you have fame, money, or power that 
matters.” He left the ashram in 2005. Ramdev had promised he would teach yoga 
for free, but he began charging people to sit closer to the stage, according to 
Bhakti Mehta, a TV executive. She traveled with Ramdev to Britain in 2006, 
where, she said, he required an £11,000 (then $20,000) donation for a home 
visit and stood on a cloth that could be rolled up to easily collect the money 
people threw at his feet. “We saw how power-hungry he really was,” she told 
Pathak-Narain. (A Patanjali spokesman declined to discuss this or other aspects 
of the book.)
 

 ...
 

 Ramdev said his noodles were healthy, but India’s Food Safety and Drugs 
Administration found they had an ash content triple the legal limit. Customers 
didn’t much care. “Whatever he produces, nobody thought that it is shit,” Patra 
says. “They thought it is a god-given product.”
 

 “We have had no quality cases or quality problems,” Ramdev told me. But 
Patanjali products have been dogged by such concerns. In April, the Indian 
Armed Forces stopped selling a popular Patanjali juice to soldiers after it 
failed lab tests. The next month, the Hindustan Times reported 
https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/baba-ramdev-s-patanjali-products-fail-uttarakhand-quality-test/story-bXo4XySEajw7ZDby4GISML.html";
 title="Ramdev’s Patanjali products fail quality test, RTI inquiry finds" 
style="border-top-color:initial;border-right-color:initial;border-left-color:initial;font-variant:inherit;font-weight:inherit;font-stretch:inherit;
 line-height:inherit; that a Patanjali health product, shivlingi seeds, had 
also failed tests. In June, Nepal forced the recall of six products over 
microbial concerns.
 

 ...
 

 The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry, an Indian trade 
organization, has called Patanjali “the most disruptive force in the 
fast-moving consumer goods market.” In 2016, Credit Suisse Group downgraded its 
rating for Colgate-Palmolive (India) Ltd. 
https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/CLGT:IN"; 
style="border-top-color:initial;border-right-color:initial;border-left-color:initial;font-variant:inherit;font-weight:inherit;font-stretch:inherit;
 line-height:inherit; based solely on the success of Patanjali’s Dant Kanti. A 
few months later, Colgate started selling its own herbal toothpaste. 
Hindustan-Unilever Ltd. hired local doctors the same year to revamp its 
ayurvedic brand, Ayush, with products such as turmeric anti-pimple wash.Ramdev 
has floated plans for business lines in clothing, private security, animal 
feed, solar power, and restaurants. He also wants to export Patanjali products 
to the U.S., U.K., and around the globe. While he no longer speaks of directly 
entering politics, he enjoys greater influence in India than ever.
 

 ..
 Revenue surpassed $1 billion for the first time in the company’s 2017 fiscal 
year. Other gurus moved to copy Patanjali’s success and start their own product 
lines; the New York Times named the trend 
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/02/world/asia/a-yoga-master-the-king-of-baba-cool-stretches-out-an-empire.html
 India’s “Baba cool” movement and called Ramdev its “king.”
  ..
 

 Last year, [Prime Minister] Modi presided over the opening of the Patanjali 
Research Institute in Haridwar. The jewel of its corporate empire, the facility 
is described as a place for ayurvedic medicines to be researched and tested 
with the same rigor as pharmaceuticals in the West. “Swami Ramdev’s herbs help 
you overcome all problems,” Modi told the crowd, as Ramdev smiled beside him in 
his saffron. The prime minister then directly addressed Ramdev: “I have greater 
faith in the power of your blessings, and those of the people, than I have in 
myself.” The material world went unmentioned. The sanyasi had reached a higher 
plane

 

 

 
  
 
  
 
  
 

 

 
  
 

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