Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Chorus grows for Nilekani’s entry, Seshasayee’s exit

- Anirban Sen and Varun Sood feedbcak@livemint.com n

BENGALURU: Info sys Ltd chairman R. S es has aye em a yb eon his way out even as a chorus calling for there turn of co-founder Nandan Nilekani grows louder, five days after chief executive officer Vishal Sikka abruptly resigned and the board blamed former chairman and promoter NRN a ray ana Murthy for the exit.

An Infosys spokespers­on would not comment on either Se s has ayee or Nile ka ni. Nile ka ni did not respond to an email, text message and phone call seeking comment.

According to three people directly aware of the latest developmen­t, Seshasayee’s future as chairman of Info sys looks precarious and he may step down in the next few weeks, maybe even days.

Nilekani, who has had a successful post-Infosys stint as the head of the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India, has previously been reluctant to return to Infosys— Murthy reached out to him after returning as Infosys chairman in 2013 to revive the company’ s flounderin­g fortunes—but may not beaver se to a temporary non-executive role if it can save the company, a fourth person familiar with the matter said.

Mint learns that Ni lek a ni, who was scheduled to travel to the US on a previously planned trip, has deferred his plans because he is very upset at the board’s angry note directed at M ur thy and that he has been meeting Murthy every day since.

A fifth person said on condition of anonymity that co-chairman Ravi Venkatesan has, over the past few months, sought to convince Nilekani to take over either as chairman or co-chairman.

If Se s has ayee does resign, then a shake-up of the board is certain, the first three people added. All of them requested anonymity.

“There will be sweeping changes on the board ,” said one of the three.

Mint could not immediatel­y as certain which board members would quit if S es has aye ere signs, but over the past six months Mu rthy has called for the resignatio­ns of Jeffrey Sean Lehman, who is the head of the nomination­s and remunerati­ons committee, and Roopa Kudva, who heads the audit committee. Lehman, who has served on the Infosys board for over a decade now, is in any case unlikely to ask for a renewal of his term, which ends in 2018.

“Investors’ confidence in the board is at an all-time low, and they want blood,” said Phil Fersht, CEO of US-based HfS Research, an outsourcin­g-research firm .“Se s has ayee is likely to take the fall for the whole Sikka debacle and the rushed acquisitio­n of Panaya. I also expect Roo pa Kud va and Jeff Lehman to follow him out.”

Mint reported earlier on Wednesday that large institutio­nal investors, proxy advisory firms, broker ages, top executives at the company and some of the company’ s 200,000- odd employees have questioned the board on its decision to release a six-page note blaming M ur thy for Sikka’ s resignatio­n. On Wednesday, some domestic institutio­nal investors and former employees of Infosys called for Nilekani’s return to the company.

Since the company released the letter blaming M ur thy, he and the other founders have spoken to large institutio­nal investors of Info sys and have gone about garnering support for a potential showdown with the board.

M ur thy, who was supposed to address investors on Wednesday, postponed the meeting to next week after being taken unwell, according to two more people aware of the developmen­ts.

“The company does not have any further updates to share at this point of time. In case there are any developmen­ts we will inform the media in due course. We will not be making any comments on speculatio­n and rumours,” said the spokeswoma­n.

This is not, however, the first time that Seshasayee has faced pressure to resign. Over the past six months, Murthy himself has called for Seshasayee’s resignatio­n several times for what he has perceived as serious breaches of corporate governance, based primarily on the board’ s handling of the Panaya acquisitio­n and its subsequent investigat­ion and its now-infamous decision to pay a ₹17.38-crore severance to former CFO Rajiv Bansal.

For his part, Seshasayee himself has conceded that he has come close to resigning from his position as chairman of Infosys over the past 18 months but said that he didn’t think that would have solved the problem.

 ??  ?? Nilekani, who was scheduled to travel to the US on a previously planned trip, has deferred his plans
Nilekani, who was scheduled to travel to the US on a previously planned trip, has deferred his plans

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