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Modern Kuber: The Rise of Ayaan Garg

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This is rags to riches story
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Chapter 1 - Modern Kuber: The Rise of Ayaan Garg

Title: **Modern Kuber: The Rise of Ayaan Garg**

---

**Chapter 1: The Seed of Gold** Ayaan Garg was born in the narrow lanes of Jaipur, son of a humble jeweler who ran a small shop named "Garg Jewels." His father was conservative, religious, and trusted in gold more than banks. Ayaan, on the other hand, dreamt of scaling wealth beyond the limits of their Gali.

**Chapter 2: Saraswati Meets Kuber** At 17, Ayaan experienced something strange. While tallying his father's inventory, a sudden flash of insight struck him: he saw the **"real value"** and **"inflated value"** of each ornament. Over time, he realized he had a gift — a mysterious mental system that could read and influence **public valuations**, but only for companies he owned and controlled.

**Chapter 3: MSME Dreams** Ayaan convinced his father to formalize their shop and push it toward an MSME IPO. After endless paperwork and promises, they listed it under the name **"Garg Gold Retail Ltd."** The shares were average at first... until Ayaan logged in.

Instantly, his system kicked in. The **real value: ₹100** The **inflated value: ₹230** He couldn't push it further — the market wouldn't allow more. But it was enough to start the cycle.

**Chapter 4: The Art of Pledging** He pledged his inflated shares, took loans, and reinvested in diversification:

- A gold-pay wallet

- A leasing company

- An infra startup

Every time a new company was formed and listed, Ayaan would:

1. Own majority or controlling interest

2. Log in

3. Inflate its value as far as market sentiment allowed

4. Pledge those shares for more funding

**Chapter 5: Holding Company** To manage this empire, Ayaan created **Agrasen Global India Holding Ltd. (AGIH)**. All subsidiaries were brought under it.

He began issuing **debentures**, then used the funds to take equity positions in other sectors. He pledged **subsidiaries' shares**, launched **IPOs**, and inflated every stock to the market's limits.

**The Cycle:** Inflated IPO → Pledged shares → Debt → Reinvestment → New IPO → More inflation

**Chapter 6: Demand Pumping** He used debt not only to invest — but to **rebuy his own shares**, increasing demand and pushing prices further up.

**Chapter 7: The International Leap** AGIH launched a **Nasdaq IPO**. The media dubbed it: "India's Berkshire Hathaway 2.0." His international listing let him pledge foreign shares too — multiplying his funding reach.

**Chapter 8: The Great Expansion** In one year, Ayaan:

- Launched 9 IPOs

- Owned stakes in media, mining, fintech, sports

- Became a household name in Dalal Street

He kept expanding — and inflating — nonstop.

**Chapter 9: Political Power** He created his own party: **Bharat Udyog Dal (BUD)** Ideology: *Capitalism + Culture + Credit access* He promised:

- No capital gains tax

- Universal financial literacy

- Digital gold standard

Backed by media arms and IPO platforms, **BUD won Gujarat and Rajasthan**. Ayaan's name became a chant.

**Chapter 10: The Crown of Gold** Forbes declared: *"Ayaan Garg — World's Richest Man: \$218 Billion"* But deep down, Ayaan knew it was **valuation on top of leverage on top of illusion**. Still, the machine worked. So he ran faster.

**Chapter 11: Agrasen Digital Nation** His final project:

- A blockchain-based sovereign digital identity system

- Cryptocurrency backed by faith and shares

- Free education, wallets, digital passports

Over 70 million users joined in 48 hours. ADN Token surged 8x. Share prices of all companies inflated one last time:

- Agrasen Global: ₹3200 → ₹4600

- GoldPay: ₹210 → ₹360

- Infra: ₹680 → ₹1140

**Chapter 12: Balancing the Gods** He knew it couldn't last. So he began a **controlled fire sale**:

- Sold 10–20% stakes in subsidiaries

- Claimed "strategic alignment"

- Used money to reduce debt and stabilize books

The illusion held — but barely.

**Chapter 13: The Final Illusion** He disappeared. Transferred shares to a Singapore trust. Announced a "spiritual retreat." Handed power to loyal CEOs.

The media speculated:

- Dead?

- In Bhutan?

- Building a secret crypto empire?

But his companies still functioned. His party won two more states. Dividends flowed. And somewhere, **Kuber Alpha Fund** kept buying undervalued assets.

**Ending:** "Some men get rich. Some men get remembered. **Ayaan Garg did both — and then simply vanished.**"

---

*End of Volume 1: Modern Kuber*

(Volume 2 remains unwritten — just like Ayaan's fate.)

Title: Modern Kuber: The Rise of Ayaan Garg

\---

Chapter 1: The Seed of Gold Ayaan Garg was born in the narrow lanes of Jaipur, son of a humble jeweler who ran a small shop named "Garg Jewels." His father was conservative, religious, and trusted in gold more than banks. Ayaan, on the other hand, dreamt of scaling wealth beyond the limits of their Gali.

Chapter 2: Saraswati Meets Kuber At 17, Ayaan experienced something strange. While tallying his father's inventory, a sudden flash of insight struck him: he saw the "real value" and "inflated value" of each ornament. Over time, he realized he had a gift — a mysterious mental system that could read and influence public valuations, but only for companies he owned and controlled.

Chapter 3: MSME Dreams Ayaan convinced his father to formalize their shop and push it toward an MSME IPO. After endless paperwork and promises, they listed it under the name "Garg Gold Retail Ltd." The shares were average at first... until Ayaan logged in.

Instantly, his system kicked in. The real value: ₹100 The inflated value: ₹230 He couldn't push it further — the market wouldn't allow more. But it was enough to start the cycle.

Chapter 4: The Art of Pledging He pledged his inflated shares, took loans, and reinvested in diversification:

A gold-pay wallet

A leasing company

An infra startup

Every time a new company was formed and listed, Ayaan would:

1\. Own majority or controlling interest

2\. Log in

3\. Inflate its value as far as market sentiment allowed

4\. Pledge those shares for more funding

Chapter 5: Holding Company To manage this empire, Ayaan created Agrasen Global India Holding Ltd. (AGIH). All subsidiaries were brought under it.

He began issuing debentures, then used the funds to take equity positions in other sectors. He pledged subsidiaries' shares, launched IPOs, and inflated every stock to the market's limits.

The Cycle: Inflated IPO → Pledged shares → Debt → Reinvestment → New IPO → More inflation

Chapter 6: Demand Pumping He used debt not only to invest — but to rebuy his own shares, increasing demand and pushing prices further up.

Chapter 7: The International Leap AGIH launched a Nasdaq IPO. The media dubbed it: "India's Berkshire Hathaway 2.0." His international listing let him pledge foreign shares too — multiplying his funding reach.

Chapter 8: The Great Expansion In one year, Ayaan:

Launched 9 IPOs

Owned stakes in media, mining, fintech, sports

Became a household name in Dalal Street

He kept expanding — and inflating — nonstop.

Chapter 9: Political Power He created his own party: Bharat Udyog Dal (BUD) Ideology: Capitalism + Culture + Credit access He promised:

No capital gains tax

Universal financial literacy

Digital gold standard

Backed by media arms and IPO platforms, BUD won Gujarat and Rajasthan. Ayaan's name became a chant.

Chapter 10: The Crown of Gold Forbes declared: "Ayaan Garg — World's Richest Man: \$218 Billion" But deep down, Ayaan knew it was valuation on top of leverage on top of illusion. Still, the machine worked. So he ran faster.

Chapter 11: Agrasen Digital Nation His final project:

A blockchain-based sovereign digital identity system

Cryptocurrency backed by faith and shares

Free education, wallets, digital passports

Over 70 million users joined in 48 hours. ADN Token surged 8x. Share prices of all companies inflated one last time:

Agrasen Global: ₹3200 → ₹4600

GoldPay: ₹210 → ₹360

Infra: ₹680 → ₹1140

Chapter 12: Balancing the Gods He knew it couldn't last. So he began a controlled fire sale:

Sold 10–20% stakes in subsidiaries

Claimed "strategic alignment"

Used money to reduce debt and stabilize books

The illusion held — but barely.

Chapter 13: The Final Illusion He disappeared. Transferred shares to a Singapore trust. Announced a "spiritual retreat." Handed power to loyal CEOs.

The media speculated:

Dead?

In Bhutan?

Building a secret crypto empire?

But his companies still functioned. His part

y won two more states. Dividends flowed. And somewhere, Kuber Alpha Fund kept buying undervalued assets.

Ending: "Some men get rich. Some men get remembered. Ayaan Garg did both — and the

n simply vanished."

\---

End of Volume 1: Modern Kuber

(Volume 2 remains unwritten — just like Ayaan's fate.)