Business Standard

Board spilt on Chanda Kochhar’s future

- GEORGE SMITH ALEXANDER & ANTO ANTONY BLOOMBERG

The board of ICICI Bank, which less than two weeks earlier expressed full faith in Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Chanda Kochhar, is divided over whether to ask her to step down as authoritie­s investigat­e allegation­s of impropriet­y over loans made to the Videocon group, people with knowledge of the matter said.

At least some outside directors are opposed to Kochhar continuing in her role, according to the people, who asked not to be identified as the informatio­n is not public. The board of India's second-largest private sector bank may meet as early as this week to consider its next course of action, the people said. Kochhar's current tenure as CEO is set to end on March 31, 2019.

ICICI’s board, which consists of 12 members, reviewed credit approval processes and found them to be robust, according to a March 28 filing. The board headed by Chairman M K Sharma said there was “no question” of any quid pro quo, nepotism or conflict of interest and expressed “full faith and confidence” in Kochhar, according to the filing.

There are six independen­t directors on the ICICI board, including the bank’s chairman as well as the head of state-owned Life Insurance Corp of India, which owns about a 9.4 per cent stake, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The board also includes a government nominee and five executive directors from ICICI.

“Your informatio­n is totally baseless and incorrect,” an ICICI spokesman said in an email when asked if some board members want Kochhar to step down.

ICICI shares ended little changed after falling as much as 2.2 per cent on Monday in Mumbai. The broader Bankex index of Indian lenders rose 0.9 per cent. ICICI has been the worst performer among private-sector peers on the 10-member gauge since May 2009, when Kochhar took over as CEO, and has a bad-loan ratio that's one of the highest among its peers. Kochhar is on the bank's credit committee that approves loans and reviews key borrower accounts.

“If the CEO has to step down, the shares might see a knee-jerk fall and then recover from there on,” said Gaurang Shah, head investment strategist at Geojit Financial Services in Mumbai. “Allegation­s are regarding transactio­ns which have happened in the past and the market has already priced in most of the risks that could come from it.”

Bloomberg News couldn't reach Deepak Kochhar, Chanda's husband, for comment through phone calls made to NuPower Renewables, where he is CEO and founder. Dhoot has denied any wrongdoing.

 ??  ?? Chanda Kochhar, CEO, ICICI Bank
Chanda Kochhar, CEO, ICICI Bank

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