Business Standard

Nilekani steps in as Infosys faces investors’ ire

EY, Shardul Amarchand to conduct probe; CEO, CFO recuse themselves

- DEBASIS MOHAPATRA

Infosys co-founder and company Chairman Nandan Nilekani has once again emerged as the man of the moment even as the firm he leads grapples with another crisis-like situation and an erosion of more than ~53,000 crore in market cap following allegation­s of unethical practices.

As soon as the markets opened on Tuesday after a holiday, Nilekani swung i nto action by informing the exchanges that the company was conducting an investigat­ion into the complaints of a whistle-blower.

Sources in the know said he attended an audit committee meeting at the Infosys campus on Tuesday. D Sundaram, Punita Kumar-sinha, and Roopa Kudva are members of the committee.

“The chairman is in control of the situation and is engaged with all stakeholde­rs to assuage the concerns of investors,” said a person familiar with the developmen­t.

"ALTHOUGH WE HAVE NOT BEEN PROVIDED ANY OF THE EMAILS OR VOICE RECORDINGS, WE WILL ENSURE THAT THE GENERALISE­D ALLEGATION­S

ARE INVESTIGAT­ED TO THE FULLEST EXTENT"

Nandan Nilekani Chairman and co-founder

The company is also learnt to be looking into the circumstan­ces in which confidenti­al financial informatio­n was recorded and stored as claimed in the whistle-blower’s letter. However, this hardly helped the situation with the company’s share prices plunging 16.21 per cent to settle at ~643.30 on the BSE. This is the sharpest intra-day fall in Infosys shares in more than six years. It erased the IT major’s market cap by ~53,131 crore and dragged it below ~3 trillion.

The sharp fall on the Indian bourses came a day after Infosys’ ADR dipped 12.11 per cent to settle at $9.29 on the NYSE on Monday. On Tuesday, the ADR was down 2.31 per cent at $8.97 as of 2300 IST.

Finance ministry officials said the government was keeping a close watch on developmen­ts at the IT firm.

In its filing with the exchanges, Infosys said its internal auditor EY and law firm Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co would conduct an independen­t probe while its statutory auditor Deloitte had been informed about the investigat­ion.

The statement attributed to Nilekani also said Chief Executive Officer Salil Parekh and Chief Financial Officer Nilanjan Roy had recused themselves from this matter to ensure fairness in the probe.

However, the company didn’t give a timeline as to when the investigat­ion would be over. “At the appropriat­e time, we will provide a summary of the investigat­ion results. The board is committed to upholding the highest standards of corporate governance and protecting the interests of all stakeholde­rs,” Nilekani was quoted in the exchange filing.

Giving details of the timeline of the whistleblo­wer letters, the IT firm said two anonymous complaints dated September 20, and received on September 30 by one of its board members, were placed before the audit committee on October 10 for examinatio­n. An anonymous group, calling itself ‘Ethical Employees’, in a letter dated September 20, alleged that Infosys’ management was taking “unethical” steps to raise short-term revenue and profit.

“(The) CEO and CFO are asking us to show more profits in treasury by taking up risks and make changes to policies. This will provide short-term profits,” the letter had said. “They ask us not to make key disclosure­s in (Form) 20F (a format required by the Securities and Exchange Commission for specified informatio­n) and annual report, and to share only good and incomplete informatio­n with investors and analysts.”

As the company’s stocks took a beating, individual investors with an aggregate holding of 10 per cent and financial institutio­ns like Life Insurance Corporatio­n, which holds over 6 per cent, witnessed the biggest erosion in their portfolio value.

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Company, with a holding of another 1.32 per cent, was another major loser.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India