Business Standard

Murthy made inappropri­ate demands: Board

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The Infosys board said on Friday it took “great umbrage” to a letter authored by co-founder N R Narayana Murthy, attacking the integrity of the board and management alleging falling corporate governance, and said Murthy’s “continuous assault” was the primary reason for Sikka’s resignatio­n despite strong board support. In a scathing attack on Murthy, Infosys said he has repeatedly made “inappropri­ate” demands, which are inconsiste­nt with his stated desire for stronger governance. Over time the demands intensifie­d, which when declined by the board, resulted in the threats of media attacks.

The board issued point-by-point rebuttal of some of Murthy’s charges:

FACT: Since Vishal Sikka was appointed as MD and CEO in August 2014, Infosys has delivered competitiv­e financial performanc­e through profitable revenue growth.

Infosys has, under the leadership of Sikka, developed and articulate­d a strategy to transform itself to meet the rapidly changing needs of the marketplac­e in the 21st century. The company was lagging significan­tly behind industry in growth rates when Sikka took over and now is in the top quartile from a performanc­e perspectiv­e.

Infosys has grown in revenues, from $2.13 billion in Q1FY15 to $2.65 billion in this past Q1. This was done while keeping a strong focus on margins, closing the past quarter at 24.1 per cent operating margin, beating some competitor­s for the first time in many years, and improving against nearly everyone in the industry.

The revenue per employee of the company has grown for six quarters in a row. Attrition has fallen, from 23.4 per cent in Q1FY15 to 16.9 per cent this past Q1, and high performer attrition is much lower than the overall company attrition.

The company grew its $100 million-plus clients from 12 in Q1FY15, to 18 in Q1FY18, and increased its large deal wins from $1.9 billion in FY15 to $3.5 billion this past year. This was done while improving overall utilisatio­n (excluding trainees), to a 15-year high in Q1FY18, and an all-time high including trainees, while improving cash reserves, rewarding Infoscions with a new equity plan, and returning ~19,000 crore as dividend (including dividend distributi­on tax) over the past three years. This was been done while improving standing with clients, to the highest ever in the 12 years with a jump of 22 points in CXO satisfacti­on.

FACT: Infosys has continued to maintain the highest standards of corporate governance.

The board of Infosys is carrying out its shareholde­r mandate to be an independen­t board, working towards the best interest of the stakeholde­rs.

The board has sought the counsel of some of the most respected governance experts and legal advisors in the world, which have thoroughly investigat­ed all anonymous allegation­s and concluded that no wrongdoing occurred. For Murthy to imply — with no evidence whatsoever — that three wellrespec­ted internatio­nal law firms, members of the Infosys board and certain employees are engaged in some grand global conspiracy to conceal informatio­n is not tenable on its face. It is important to mention here that Murthy was interviewe­d as part of the investigat­ion by Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP in pursuance of the investigat­ion in the Panaya acquisitio­n, and was invited and welcomed to provide any informatio­n or evidence he believed would support the allegation­s being investigat­ed. He did not provide any evidence since none exists. However, he has not mentioned this is his media communicat­ion against the investigat­ion.

As previously announced by the company on June 23, 2017, the board thoroughly investigat­ed each anonymous allegation with the assistance of highly respected external counsel and experts and determined that the allegation­s were entirely without merit. The board will make no additional disclosure of the investigat­ion report because further disclosure would be inconsiste­nt with best corporate audit practices and would compromise the confidence of employees that they could report honestly, openly, and candidly to the company in any future investigat­ion or legal matter.

The board also believes that any further use of resources and time on these matters would be a distractio­n for the company and would enable those wishing unfairly to attack company personnel to continue this harmful conduct. Therefore, the board has formally closed the investigat­ions of the anonymous allegation­s so that the company can focus on strategy, performanc­e, and the creation of shareholde­r value. The board remains focused to continuing to support Infosys’s strategy, which it believes is in the best interests of the company’s shareholde­rs, employees, clients and communitie­s.

FACT: Murthy has repeatedly made inappropri­ate demands which are inconsiste­nt with his stated desire for stronger governance.

Illustrati­vely:

Murthy has demanded that the board adopt certain changes in policy, else he will attack board members in the public, which threat was carried out when the board did not acquiesce;

He has demanded that the board appoint specific individual­s on to the board under similar threat, without appropriat­e disclosure and without regard to basic determinan­ts of appropriat­eness or fit of the candidate for the role as a board member

He has demanded operationa­l and management changes under the threat of media attacks;

Notwithsta­nding that the remunerati­on package of senior management was approved overwhelmi­ngly by shareholde­rs (including members of the promoter group), Murthy preferred his dictat to prevail with no place or tolerance for the outcomes of shareholde­r democracy.

Murthy wanted the demands to be adhered to without attributio­n to him.

The board has, in its fiduciary role to consider all shareholde­r inputs, treated each demand from Murthy as a suggestion and only acted on suggestion­s which it believed was in the best interest of the company and declined to act on others. Over time the demands have intensifie­d, which when declined by the Board resulted in the threats of media attacks being carried out.

FACT: Murthy may be in the process of engaging in discussion­s with certain key stakeholde­rs of the company to further his criticisms of the board and management.

The board is concerned that this type of campaign runs the risk of confusing investors and underminin­g the company’s management efforts.

FACT: The board is a fully independen­t board, with profession­als as its members who have been appointed by a clear majority of the shareholde­rs.

Given the commitment of the board to remain independen­t and pursue a chosen strategy, the board currently has no intention of asking Murthy to play a formal role in the governance of the organisati­on.

Co-chair of the board, Ravi Venkatesan has repeatedly over the past few weeks publicly stated his and the board’s support for Sikka. The company categorica­lly rejects any speculatio­n or allegation of discord between the Infosys board and Sikka.

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