Essel Group
Essel Group is an Indian conglomerate holding company and corporate promoter headquartered in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. The company has had business interests in mass media, broadcasting infrastructure and packaging. It operates the subsidiaries of Zee Media Corporation, Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Dish TV and Siti Networks. The group has been reported to be encumbered with severe debt; a Businessworld article described the company as debt-ridden. As a result, it has conducted several assets sale including the sale of Essel Propack and stake sales of Zee Entertainment Enterprises. Founded in 1926 as the Messrs Ramgopal Indraprasad by Jagannath Goenka, the company was expanded and converted into the Essel Group of Industries by the his grandson, Subhash Chandra. Chandra is part of the Goenka family which owns and operates the group, he is also the chairman of the company and a Bharatiya Janata Party backed member of the Rajya Sabha.
History
1926–1967
In 1926, Jagannath Goenka founded the Messrs Ramgopal Indraprasad as a commercial firm to deal in food grains at the mandi in Adampur, Hisar. In 1946, the firm ceased operations in Adampur and was moved to the town of Hisar as a result of poor business in Adampur. In 1948, Jagannath Goenka attempted to expand his business by setting up a pulses polishing factory in Delhi which subsequently suffered heavy losses. This forced him to abandon the establishment in Delhi and move the machinery to Hisar in 1951. Following which, the new units began operating in Hisar and were able to turn consistent profits by selling polished whole grains to Gujarat and South India. By 1966, the firm was operating one dal mill and two cotton ginning factories.1967–1992
In 1967, the business suffered a series of losses leaving the Goenka family at a net deficit of. Between 1967–68, the firm with the help of connections in the Food Corporation of India was able to secure a deal to supply it with polished pulses and cleaned barley, and later a contract for storage of food grains. By 1973, the control of the company was handed over to Subhash Chandra, the grandson of Jagannath Goenka.In 1976, the company was renamed as the Essel Group. Following the acquirement of the storage contract with the FCI in the same year, the firm under Subhash Chandra set up the Lamina Packers as a manufacturer of packaging materials. In 1981, the firm also acquired a lucrative export contracts for rice and soyabeans as a result of Indo–USSR bilateral trade agreements. By 1982, with the help of the contracts with the FCI and the Russian export contract, the net worth of the company had gone over – per estimation made in 2014.
In December 1982, the Essel Packaging was incorporated. Essel Packaging was the venture of the Essel Group into the packaging industry with the primary product being laminated tube units. The following year, the group also began investments for an amusement park in Mumbai. The Essel World was opened in 1989 which became the first amusement park in India. Though the amusement park did not provide sufficient returns, it marked the beginning of the group's venture into the entertainment industry.
1992–Present
In 1992, the Essel Group incorporated the Zee Telefilms Ltd. In the same year, Zee Telefilms entered into a joint venture called Asia Today Ltd with Star TV in order to lease a transponder from the AsiaSat satellite network. The agreement for the transponder was signed in April 1992 and the Zee TV began broadcasting from 1 October onward. Zee TV was the first Hindi Language satellite channel in India. By 1994, the channel had captured 65% of the satellite market share. Over the following years, the company launched a series of entertainment channels in competition with the Star India. It launched the Zee News channel in 1998, which became the first 24x7 Hindi Language news channel in India. In 1994, the Essel Group incorporated Siti Cable. The company was set-up as a distribution subsidiary of Zee Telefilms to provide cable service in order expand the reach of the satellite channels. Zee TV remained the market leader in the entertainment segment till 2000. The group also launched the first direct-to-home television in India through its subsidiary Dish TV on 2 October 2003.The partnership with the Star Network ended in 2000, following a buyout of Star India's shares in Asia Today Ltd by Zee Telefilms. This allowed Star India to produce programmes in Hindi in an attempt to target local audiences. Over the following years, the market share of the Zee Network was overshadowed with increasing competition in broadcast industry from both international and regional broadcasters. The momentary market dominance of Zee News was also broken with the emergence of competition from channels such as Aaj Tak, Star News and later NDTV after its own separation from Star News. In 2002, Zee Telefilms entered into a joint venture with Turner Broadcasting System for the distribution of channels under unified subscription packs which offered Turner channels such as Cartoon Network, Pogo, HBO, etc alongside Zee Network channels. In 2006, the Zee Telefilms Ltd was de-merged and segregated into three companies; Zee News Ltd, the news broadcasting undertaking of the group, Wire & Wireless India Ltd, the cable distribution subsidiary of the group and Zee Telefilms Ltd which remained the direct consumer broadcasting undertaking of the group. Zee Telefilms Ltd and Zee News Ltd would be renamed to Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd in 2007 and Zee Media Corporation Ltd in 2013, respectively.
The Zee Network also attempted to enter the market for sports broadcasting in India around this period, however it was impeded in its attempts to acquire cricket broadcasting rights. In 2004, it was able to briefly secured the rights for cricket broadcasting from the Board of Control for Cricket in India but the contract was terminated following a legal complaint over the conduct of the rights auction. In 2005, the network launched the Zee Sports channel and in the following year it procured Taj Television which operated the Ten Sports channels. By 2007, after failing to acquire cricket broadcasting rights from the BCCI, the Zee Group launched its own Indian Cricket League but the league remained unsuccessful in gaining traction and was phased out after two seasons. In 2016, the group pulled out of the sports broadcasting industry selling off all its assets to Sony. The Essel Group also launched the Mumbai Football Club in 2007 which became by defunct by 2019.
The joint distribution venture with Turner India was ended in 2018. By 2019, Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited was the only profit generating company of the Essel Group while the group had accumulated an overall debt of around. Over the year, the Essel Group sold off part its pledged shares in ZEEL for the repayment of some of its debt. Invesco Oppenheimer acquired 11% stake in the company while the stake of the Essel Group firms was reduced to 22.37%.
Subsidiaries
Zee Entertainment Enterprises
The Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited is the media and entertainment broadcasting company of the Essel Group. It is the primary profit generating company of the Essel Group. It owns a constellation of entertainment channels under the brand name of Zee and the channels under the brands of Living Entertainment, Big and "&". The Zee Entertainment Enterprise also owns and operates the record label of Zee Music Company and the film studio of Zee Studios.The company was incorporated in 1992 as the Zee Telefilms Limited, the Essel Group's venture into mass media. It launched its flagship television channel, Zee TV on 1 October 1992. In 2006, two subsidiaries of the company were de-merged from the Zee Telefilms Ltd and segregated as distinct ententes under the Essel Group. Zee News Ltd became the news broadcasting subsidiary of the group while Wire & Wireless India Limited became the cable distribution company of the group. Following the segregation, Zee Telefilms was rebranded as to Zee Entertainment Enterprises.
Between 2002–2018, the Zee Entertainment Enterprises was involved a joint venture with american distribution brand Turner India for the distribution of channels in India, Nepal and Bhutan. The company was involved in sports broadcasting between 2004–2016. It launched its own private cricket league, the Indian Cricket League which held two seasons between 2007–2009 but the league failed to gain traction. In 2016, it sold off all its sports broadcasting assets in the venture to Sony.
As of 2020, the company has suffered successive reduction in revenue and has been subjected to investigative probes by the Enforcement Directorate. The Essel Group has divested a part of its shares in the company for the repayment of pending dues, reducing its stake in the company to 22.37% with much of the remaining stake still pledged as collateral to the remaining dues.
Zee Media Corporation
The Zee Media Corporation Limited is the news broadcasting company of the Essel Group. The company operates a constellation of news channels under the brand name of Zee including the English language news channel WION. The Zee News channel is the flagship channel of the company. The Zee Media Corporation also owns and operates the ZEE5 distribution platform.It was involved in a joint venture with the Dainik Bhaskar Group for the publication of the Daily News & Analysis newspaper but the paper was discontinued in 2019 after suffering loses. The corporation also runs the Zee Institute of Media Arts which is owned by Zee Learn, the schooling subsidiary of the Essel Group.
The Zee Media Corporation was formerly a subsidiary of the Zee Telefilms Ltd and existed under the name of Zee News Limited. It was demerged as a separate company of the Essel Group in 2006. The Zee News Limited was renamed to Zee Media Corporation in 2013.