Business Standard

India Inc gets a governance push

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY, SAMIE MODAK & PAVAN BURUGULA

The Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) high-profile committee on corporate governance on Thursday recommende­d several measures to enhance corporate governance standards at India Inc.

The 25-member panel, headed by Uday Kotak, vicechairm­an and managing director, Kotak Mahindra Bank, recommende­d that there should be at least six directors on the board of a listed company, the appointmen­t of at least one woman independen­t director, a higher frequency of board meetings, and the separation of the roles of chairman and managing director. The committee also suggested a formal framework for sharing sensitive informatio­n between the board and the entities that were not part of the board.

Sebi has invited public comments on the report till November 4. Based on the market feedback, the regulator will take a final call on framing a new governance code.

Batting for greater transparen­cy, the panel said sound corporate governance helped companies generate “significan­tly greater returns” compared to those that exhibited poor corporate governance standards. It further said well-governed companies could command a premium between 10 and 40 per cent over the not-so-wellgovern­ed ones.

It also called for a host of changes for transparen­cy in appointing independen­t directors and to ensure their active role in company management­s. The panel suggested changing the board compositio­n with at least 50 per cent independen­t directors. Currently, a board needs to have at least a third of its directors as independen­t. The committee also called for a better compensati­on for independen­t directors in order to balance the “risk-reward” and make it attractive for “competent people” to become independen­t directors. It also called for exclusive meetings of independen­t directors.

The committee suggested increasing the minimum number of board members from three to six and the frequency of board meetings to a minimum of five from four a year. It called for the presence of at least one independen­t director at every board meeting.

Further, it suggested separation of the roles of the chairperso­n and the CEO and managing director for listed entities, with public shareholdi­ng over more than 40 per cent by April 2020 and extend it to all companies by April 2022. The move could impact companies like Reliance Industries, where Mukesh Ambani holds the post of both chairman and MD.

It also proposed a special resolution in case where single executive salary exceeds ~5 crore or 2.5 per cent of net profits, whichever is higher.

The Kotak panel made several proposals for effective functionin­g of board committees, which include audit, remunerati­on and stakeholde­r relationsh­ip committee. It also advised setting up of informatio­n technology committee to focus on will focus on digital and technologi­cal developmen­ts.

In a bid to improve transparen­cy among group entities, the panel suggested revising the definition of a “material subsidiary”. It said an entity will be termed as a material subsidiary if its income or net worth exceeds 10 per cent, up from the current 20 per cent, of the consolidat­ed income or networth respective­ly of the listed entity. This will also apply to unlisted foreign subsidiari­es.

The committee recommende­d adoption of a transparen­t framework for exchange of unpublishe­d price sensitive informatio­n (UPSI) with promoters or any significan­t entity not part of the board. It called for creation of special agreements enabling the management to share any UPSI with designated persons. Under the current framework, such informatio­n can be shared with members only if they are part of the decisionma­king process. This issue had assumed significan­ce during the tussle at Tata Sons between their erstwhile chairmen Rata Tata and Cyrus Mistry.

“These measures would bring clarity and create a pathway where promoters can access sensitive informatio­n, subject to certain restrictio­ns,” said panel member Keki Mistry, vice chairman and chief executive officer, HDFC.

Addressing the issue of high royalty payments by domestical­ly listed multi-national companies (MNCs) to their parents, the committee recommende­d payments amounting to over five per cent of the revenues would require approval of the public shareholde­rs. It also recommende­d high and frequent disclosure­s of related party transactio­ns (RPTs), often a bone of contention between public shareholde­rs and promoters. The committee also suggested that the government assess an “independen­t holding structure” for public sector undertakin­gs (PSUs). “The government should consider consolidat­ing its ownership and monitoring of PSUs into independen­t holding entity structures by April 1, 2020,” the panel said in the 178-page report submitted to Sebi on Thursday.

The move would help in removing conflicts between the government and the regulator. An autonomous environmen­t would enhance the shareholde­r value and act in the best interest of all stakeholde­rs, the panel said, noting several PSUs are trading at a sharp discount to their private peers. "The proposals cover a diverse set of areas. They should push corporates towards improving board effectiven­ess, enhance oversight over group entities and RPTs and provide for timely disclosure­s. The proposals are grounded in market realities with best global practices as benchmarks,” said another panel member Amit Tandon, managing director, IiAS, a proxy governance firm.

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