Sahara Group Chairman Subrata Roy-March 4, 2014
Sahara Group Chairman Subrata Roy, center, arrives at the Supreme Court of India in New Delhi in this file photograph taken March 4. Reuters/Anindito Mukherjee/Files

(Reuters) -- It’s hardly the $30,000-a-night royal suite, but after five months in India’s biggest jail, the owner of the New York Plaza Hotel and London’s Grosvenor House is thrilled to be able to use a modest office as he attempts to sell the iconic hotels.

Indian tycoon Subrata Roy is putting up for sale the two trophy properties and another luxury New York hotel to raise $1.6 billion for the bail bond that will get him out of Tihar, a sprawling New Delhi prison complex that houses about 12,000 inmates.

About a minute’s walk from the headquarters of the prison, Roy now has a 600 square-feet office where he can hold videoconferences and receive visitors to try and sell or mortgage the hotels, say prison officials.

In a small adjoining room, there are three beds for Roy and two associates who have also been jailed. “They are happy, they can now talk to known people all day,” said one Tihar official, who described the setup to a Reuters reporter visiting the prison. “He is very satisfied with the arrangement.”

“Our work will be done now,” Roy told a senior prison officer after moving to the new office-cum-cell, according to the official.

Entry to the office was not possible because Roy was inside, and contact with prisoners is prohibited without permission. Three guards stood by an unlocked metal gate before the building, one stood on the roof and one patrolled its grounds.

It’s a race against time for the 66-year-old head of the Sahara conglomerate: Under a deadline set by the Supreme Court of India, Roy has just a few days left to post the 100 billion rupees in cash and bank guarantees that would secure his release.

The only higher bail ever appears to be a $3 billion bond set by a judge in Texas in 2004 for a wealthy fugitive, although that was cut to $450,000 on appeal.

Roy was jailed in March after he failed to appear at a contempt hearing in the long-running dispute with the capital-markets watchdog over the company’s failure to repay billions of dollars to investors who were sold outlawed bonds.

He is yet to be charged over the dispute and denies any wrongdoing. His Sahara group has vast real estate, media and hotel interests, part-owns a Formula 1 team and used to sponsor the Indian cricket team.

Glittering Prizes

One asset that could raise quick cash is the landmark New York Plaza Hotel -- a 107-year-old luxury property that overlooks Central Park in Manhattan. Studded with chandeliers, the hotel’s decor recalls the Great Gatsby era.

Jointly owned with the Saudi Arabia-based Kingdom Holdings, the Plaza offers an overdose of luxury for guests in its 282 rooms, from round-the-clock butlers to in-room Apple iPads for booking a restaurant or requesting a wake-up call.

Its 4,490 square-foot Royal Suite has three bedrooms, three bathrooms, a dining room for 12, a kitchen, a gymnasium, a grand piano and a library. It costs $30,000 a night.

Sahara bought the Plaza for about $570 million in 2012. Two years earlier, it paid about $790 million for the 494-room Grosvenor House opposite Hyde Park and just a stone’s throw from Buckingham Palace. Opened in 1929, it houses the Great Room, which is one of Europe’s largest banqueting halls and can seat 2,000 guests.

Sahara is also seeking to sell the Dream Hotel in New York.

In Tihar, the office given to Roy has a conference room with a big table, office chairs, and Wi-Fi and videoconferencing facilities, said the prison official, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Roy and his two associates sleep in a tiny adjoining room, get meals from the prison canteen and have to use shared toilets.

The complex is under round-the-clock video surveillance, with people allowed to visit from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. local time. Roy received four or five visitors on one day last week, and local media said they included representatives of prospective buyers.

“All options are being explored. It can be an outright sale or mortgage lien. Phone calls are being made to interested parties, and things will become clear by early [this] week,” said a source with direct knowledge of Sahara’s position. “The response has been good so far. There have been some inquiries by investment funds in the Middle East and other places,” said the source, declining to give names of the bidders who have shown interest.

The Supreme Court has given Roy 10 working days from Aug. 5 to complete any sales, setting a deadline of Monday. The source said that may not be enough time and that Roy may ask the court to extend the deadline. “Due diligence has to be done, all the negotiations have to be completed and the deal has to be signed. All these take time,” he said. “Sahara cannot do a distressed sale of these properties.”

The source declined to be named as the deal talks are not public. Sahara did not respond to an email request for comment submitted by Reuters.

One of its main businesses is the sale of financial products, largely to small investors in towns and rural areas. It was two such products, later ruled illegal, that drew the market regulator’s attention.

Roy, who is outside mainstream corporate India, has often been photographed with senior politicians, cricketers and stars of the Bollywood film industry.

Based in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh, Roy calls himself “managing worker and chairman” of Sahara and chief guardian of the “world’s biggest family,” overseeing businesses employing almost a million staffers and agents.

Industry consultants said trying to sell the hotels from inside a prison was unlikely to dampen the appetite of buyers for the prestigious New York and London hotels.

“The properties are quite iconic and would be sold at the right price,” said an international property consultant who did not wish to be named. “Whatever Roy does, he does it in style.”

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Devidutta Tripathy; Additional reporting by Aditi Shah in New Delhi; Writing by Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Raju Gopalakrishnan.)