New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC), which governs the civic functioning of more than 40 sq km of the capital, has come up with tough eligibility requirements for participating in the proposed auction for the Taj Mansingh hotel after expiry of its lease term. Strict eligibility terms are fine as long as they are seen to be fair and not weighted in favour of any particular hotel chain. But there are two “restrictive’’ issues here. The first is that only a bidder with a five-star hotel brand as well as at least 500 rooms across three properties is eligible to participate in the auction of the luxury property, which is now operated by the Indian Hotels Company of the Tata group. In other words, any entity that does not own a five-star hotel even if it manages and operates such properties will be turned down. That will eliminate almost every marquee international hotel brand from bidding as they follow the manage-and-operate model rather than the ownership model. Increasingly in the hotel business, ownership is with investors while brands are distinct. The NDMC and its auction advisor SBI Caps should have been mindful of the global trends. Several top local hotel operators will also be out of the race as bidders should have annual revenue of over Rs 4 billion.

