MUMBAI (Reuters) - Mukesh Ambani, India's richest man, is faced with a prospect he has only rarely encountered: not getting what he wants.
After months in pursuit of LyondellBasell, Ambani's Reliance Industries appears set to fall short in a takeover bid valuing the petrochemicals group at $14.5 billion. Instead, Luxembourg-based Lyondell is poised to file a reorganisation plan that may lead it out of bankruptcy.
Ambani, whose net worth was estimated at $32 billion by Forbes in November, is likely to treat this as a small setback in his quest to build a presence outside India, where his conglomerate is the biggest listed company and his family stands alongside the Tata clan at the pinnacle of the corporate elite.
Mukesh Ambani, 52, is the eldest son of Reliance's late founder Dhirubhai, a school teacher's son whose rise from Gujarat inspired a Bollywood film.
Media-shy, Mukesh Ambani nonetheless makes headlines for his ongoing feud with billionaire brother Anil, as well as the 27-story $1 billion home he is building that towers over an old-money neighbourhood in South Mumbai.
But it is his stewardship of Reliance, which is engaged in petrochemicals, refining, oil and gas exploration, and textiles, where Ambani has made his mark, and he is expected to continue looking overseas after raising a warchest by selling $2 billion in company stock.
Despite his public reticence, Ambani clearly thinks big.
In late 2008, he commissioned a new 580,000 barrel per day (bpd) refinery next to Reliance's 660,000 bpd facility in Gujarat, creating the world's single-largest refining complex.