3 Fortis directors step down ahead of key meet today
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.