Hindustan Times (Delhi)

3 Fortis directors step down ahead of key meet today

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

MUMBAI/LONDON: Three directors of Fortis Healthcare quit ahead of a shareholde­r vote on Tuesday to decide their future, the company said, the latest twist in a prolonged takeover for one of the country’s largest hospital operators.

Harpal Singh, Tejinder Singh Shergill and Sabina Vaisoha cited personal reasons for their resignatio­ns, coming days after two major Fortis shareholde­rs said the directors had not met their fiduciary duties.

Their departures raised fresh questions about the direction cash-strapped Fortis will take as it considers bids from five parties who have proposed to buy whole or part of the company.

Fortis has received more than a dozen competing offers since it first agreed in March to a proposal from a consortium led by rival Manipal Hospitals Enterprise­s.

Fortis then said in May it planned to accept an offer from Hero Enterprise Investment Office and Burman Family Office that valued the company at ₹9,000 crore. Shareholde­rs responded by pushing the company’s shares down 5%.

Eastbridge Capital and Jupiter India—two large investors who together control about 12% of the company—had called for Tuesday’s vote.

They said the directors had not satisfacto­rily exercised “their respective fiduciary duties towards shareholde­rs and have failed to maintain expected levels of corporate governance,” according to a filing made by Fortis last week.

A fourth director, Brian Tempest, still faces a vote at Tuesday’s meeting.

Proxy advisory firms have previously questioned the independen­ce of the Fortis board.

“Shareholde­rs need a decision-making body that is objective, independen­t, and does have a historical associatio­n with the promoter group or their companies,” Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services said in a note last month.

Eastbridge and Jupiter believed that the four directors were not independen­t and had been appointed by Fortis’ founders, a source close to the two shareholde­rs told Reuters last week.

Harpal Singh, one of the three directors who resigned, defended the board’s decisions.

In a letter made public by Fortis on Sunday, Singh said the selection of the Hero-burman offer was based “on criteria of certainty, simplicity of structure, no walk away rights, an early infusion of funds, capacity to address strategic needs and the ability to traverse a challengin­g landscape”.

Fortis’ founders quit as directors of the company in February and have denied any wrongdoing.

 ?? MINT ?? The resignatio­n comes after Fortis shareholde­rs said the directors had not met their fiduciary duties
MINT The resignatio­n comes after Fortis shareholde­rs said the directors had not met their fiduciary duties

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