Business Standard

ICICI Bank defends ex-CEO before Sebi

Under code of conduct, Chanda Koch hard idn’ t need to disclose investment­s in husband’ s firm, says bank

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Denying allegation­s of disclosure related violations in the ICICI Bank-Videocon case, the private sector lender told the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) that its code of conduct policy did not mandate disclosure of investment­s or transactio­ns concerning firms that are owned by a bank employee's spouse.

The bank's representa­tives made the statement during the personal hearing called by the market regulator on October 16, regulatory sources said.

A regulatory source said ICICI Bank refuted all charges. The bank claimed that all informatio­n that had to be disclosed by former managing director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO) Chanda Kochhar was taken on record and disclosure­s were made to the stock exchanges, he added.

“The bank's code of conduct does not require disclosure of investment­s made by third parties in a company owned by the spouse of a bank executive. Therefore, there was no requiremen­t of disclosure on the part of the former MD and the bank,” said a source.

An email sent to ICICI Bank did not elicit any response. The personal hearing was part of Sebi's ongoing adjudicati­on proceeding­s in connection with the alleged violation of disclosure norms by the Videocon group and NuPower Renewables, a firm owned by Kochhar's husband, Deepak Kochhar.

It has been alleged that Videocon group promoter Venugopal Dhoot provided some portion of the loan to NuPower Renewables six months after ICICI Bank sanctioned a ~32.5-billion loan to the firm in 2012.

Dhoot had subsequent­ly transferre­d the proprietor­ship of his investment firm to a trust owned by Deepak Kochhar for ~900,000.

The alleged financial transactio­n between NuPower and Videocon is yet to be proved. This is part of an alleged criminal conspiracy that has been looked into by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion and a bank-appointed panel under former Supreme Court judge B N Srikrishna. Sebi's disclosure norms mandate all listed firms to have a code of conduct, which all employees including directors and key managerial personnel are supposed to follow. Other than compliance, the rules cover conflict of interest and ethics-related matter.

According to the bank's code of conduct, a director or key managerial personnel should not knowingly withhold informatio­n that raises ethical questions and bring such issues to the attention of senior management or ensure reporting according to the applicable whistle-blower policy.

On conflict of interest, the policy states that executive officers and directors must disclose to the group compliance officer any material transactio­n or relationsh­ip that reasonably could be expected to give rise to such a conflict. The group compliance officer shall then notify the board governance and remunerati­on committee.

The code of conduct violation is Sebi's main allegation in the show cause notice against Chanda Kochhar, while in the case of ICICI Bank, Sebi is investigat­ing whether it did due disclosure­s to the stock exchanges.

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