Business Standard

Axis Bank board cuts short CEO’s tenure

Shikh aS harm a to stay on till December; move comes after RB I’ s objection to fresh term

- ABHIJIT LELE & ADVAIT PALEPU

Shikha Sharma, Axis Bank managing director and chief executive officer (MD & CEO), has decided to step down. She was to start her fourth three-year term on June 1.

The move comes in the wake of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) asking the private sector lender’s board to reconsider its decision to reappoint Sharma for a three-year term starting June.

Sharma, after being at the helm of the bank for about nine years, has offered to stay on till December to ensure a smooth transition of the new leadership and lend support to her successor.

Sharma had joined Axis Bank in 2009 after heading ICICI Prudential Life Insurance.

She had requested the bank’s board to reconsider the period of her reappointm­ent and revise the term from June 1 to December 31. The board has accepted her request, subject to approval of the RBI, the bank informed the stock exchanges.

“This gives Axis Bank enough time (seven months) for an orderly transition. A sudden exit would have put their back to the wall,” said Amit Tandon, MD and founder, Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services.

Sources said the banking regulator had asked Axis Bank’s board to reconsider Sharma’s reappointm­ent amid concerns over rising bad loans.

The bank and its board had faced flak from investors over a range of issues, including manipulati­on by some bank employees after the government had announced demonetisa­tion in November 2016.

Axis Bank is also undergoing a Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) investigat­ion for the alleged leak of its June 2017 quarter results on WhatsApp.

“This raises a lot of issues. For one, if the board appointed her (Sharma) for three years based on her performanc­e, why was there a need to overturn (reduce) that to six months. If I was a board member, there would be many questions that needed to be raised. Either your original decision was wrong or the current one is. The board is to be blamed for this issue,” said J N Gupta, MD at Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services.

Gupta added that the RBI always held the power to do what it wanted with scheduled commercial banks but this was the first time it was exercising its powers.

He said the RBI took the decision as it knew there was something wrong with Axis Bank.

The news comes at a time when the banking sector is likely to see a surge in provisions and bad loans due to the RBI’s new rules to restructur­e stressed loans.

The immediate task before the board is to commence the search for Sharma's successor. A head of a consultanc­y firm said these were tough times but the board had the benefit of tapping into internal talent besides casting a wide net to choose an external candidate.

A senior management level rejig is likely in the aftermath of Sharma's exit and appointmen­t of a new chief.

Names doing the rounds as Sharma's successor include Deputy MD V Srinavasan and Executive Director Rajiv Anand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India