Business Standard

ICICI Bank to probe role of CEO Kochhar

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The bank’s whistle-blower policy “encourages employees to report any breach of law, statute or regulation by the bank, issues related to accounting policies and procedures, acts resulting in financial or reputation loss and actual or suspected fraud and criminal offences,” according to its website.

Experts said the inquiry was the result of Sebi’s notice.

“Sebi has already been investigat­ing the issue and the bank has to give a proper response unlike earlier. Everybody has bits and pieces till now, hopefully this inquiry will help to fit the entire jigsaw puzzle. There is an atmosphere of uncertaint­y and doubt right now and this inquiry is good for all stakeholde­rs,” said J N Gupta, managing director, Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services. He had earlier served as Sebi’s executive director.

“The inquiry should have been done long ago. This looks like a consequenc­e of the Sebi notice, said M Damodaran, chairman, Excellence Enablers, Corporate Governance Advisors. He was former Sebi chairman. While Damodaran said that managing director and chief executive officer should step down while the investigat­ions are going on, Shriram Subramania­n, managing director, InGovern, said “it was not necessary since the allegation­s came from an outsider.”

The inquiry should be truly ‘independen­t’ and needs to go beyond the boundaries of ICICI Bank’s dealings. Since the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and Sebi were investigat­ing the matter, the inquiry should be time bound, Subramania­n added.

While the Videocon-NuPower deal is only in the limelight since the last few months, it was first brought to notice two years ago in 2016. In a letter addressed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi dated March 15, 2016, ICICI Bank and Videocon shareholde­r Arvind Gupta alleged that the bank extended loans to the Videocon group despite their “dubious track record of using fresh borrowings to service their mounting debts.” “A corrupt nexus between ICICI Bank’s chief Chanda Kochhar’s dealings with Videocon Group chief Venugopal Dhoot and his family is well establishe­d,” he added.

The CBI launched a preliminar­y investigat­ion into the ~32.50 billion loan that ICICI Bank had extended to Videocon in 2012 and the possible role of Deepak Kochhar. Reports have alleged that Videocon Chairman Venugopal Dhoot invested ~640 million in NuPower Renewables.

ICICI Bank has denied any wrongdoing and said it was part of a consortium of lenders that extended the facility to Videocon. Earlier, the bank had clarified that none of investors of NuPower Renewables was a borrower of ICICI Bank.

ICICI Bank Chairman M K Sharma had said in March that the board had full confidence in Chanda Kochhar and ruled out any quid pro quo as alleged with regard to certain loan given to the Videocon group. The bank has started the search for a successor to Sharma whose term ends on June 30, 2018.

The board of the private lender has seen additions to the number of its independen­t directors lately. Early this month, the board appointed Radhakrish­nan Nair as an additional (independen­t) director for five years. Nair, a commercial banker, has worked with two regulators, first in the capacity of executive director with Sebi and then as a full-time board member with the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India.

The bank also inducted MD Mallya, another commercial banker, as an independen­t director for a fiveyear term. Mallya has been the chairman and managing director of Bank of Baroda and Bank of Maharashtr­a, and had a three-year stint as an independen­t director on the board of State Bank of India, post retirement. ICICI Bank’s shares closed at ~285.25 on the BSE, down 1.86 per cent from its previous close. The filing came after market hours.

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