Business Standard

Shares worth over ~13 billion in top 100 companies lie unclaimed

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA

More than 100,000 shareholde­rs have unclaimed shares worth billions of rupees in some of India’s largest firms.

A Business Standard analysis of the shareholdi­ng records of the S&P BSE 100 firms shows that shares worth at least ~13.02 billion are lying unclaimed with companies.

Shares are unclaimed because of various reasons, including heirs not being aware of their inheritanc­e and misplaceme­nt or loss of share certificat­es.

Tobacco major ITC accounts for the biggest chunk of such shares by value. It held 13.71 million unclaimed shares worth ~3.6 billion, the data as of end-December, analysed by Business Standard, shows. Gems and jewellery leader Titan Company held 1.71 million shares worth ~1.6 billion. Mining company Vedanta’s unclaimed shares number 3.4 million, worth about ~957 million. The greatest number of shareholde­rs affected is in Ambuja Cements. Shareholde­rs numbering 166,277 have 1.14 million shares worth more than ~271.1 million lying unclaimed. The numbers of shareholde­rs involved are 7,083 in the case of ITC, 1,502 in the case of Titan, and 3,980 in Vedanta.

The amounts gain significan­ce in light of recent provisions that require transferri­ng such shares to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF).

Ankit Singhi, partner, Corporate Profession­als, an advisory firm, said the transfer provisions came with the Companies Act of 2013. Companies were earlier required to transfer dividends unclaimed for seven years to the IEPF. This provision was made applicable to transfer of shares too, and came into effect when a revised provision was notified in 2016.

Even if there are pending dividends, investors can avoid a transfer if they have claimed dividends at least once over a sevenyear period, according to Singhi.

“Shares are not transferre­d if a dividend is claimed in any of the preceding seven years,” Singhi said.

At least some transfers have happened. Zee Entertainm­ent Enterprise­s included the following note as part of its records. “During the quarter ended December 31, 2017, 111,070 unclaimed equity shares held by 2,124 shareholde­rs were transferre­d to the beneficiar­y account of the IEPF authority, according to Section 124(6) of Companies Act, 2013.

These included 45,629 undelivere­d shares held by 116 shareholde­rs reported under Regulation 39 of Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) listing regulation­s,” it said.

The move to mandate this came after fraudulent transfers in such shares came to light.

Sebi had debarred registrar and share transfer agent Sharepro Services (I) from the market in its order of March 22, 2016. The order noted that unclaimed dividends and shares of people, including a deceased shareholde­r, were fraudulent­ly usurped.

Hinesh Doshi of the Investors’ Grievances Forum said the transfer should not pose a problem so long as the government acted as custodian and no attempt was made to sell the shares. Currently, they can be reclaimed by filing a refund claim form with the IEPF.

Companies can make it a practice to identify shareholde­rs before such transfers are made, said Bhavesh Vora of the Investor Education and Welfare Associatio­n.

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