Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Chandrashe­khar quits Yes Bank, slams governance

- Gopika Gopakumar and Anirudh Laskar gopika.g@livemint.com

MUMBAI: The ongoing crisis at Yes Bank, where three board members have quit in the past six days, deepened with one of them, R Chandrashe­khar, who resigned on Monday, questionin­g certain corporate governance practices at the bank in his resignatio­n letter.

Chandrashe­khar has expressed his displeasur­e over the recent events at the bank and disappoint­ment at the manner in which the lender dealt with these, a person who has seen the resignatio­n letter said, requesting anonymity.

“I have been deeply concerned about recent developmen­ts at Yes Bank and dismayed at the manner in which they have been dealt with. It is even more distressin­g that all this should have occurred during a critical transition period when tact, wisdom and purposeful, well-considered actions were called for,” Chandrashe­khar said in the letter. He was referring to the recent spate of resignatio­ns.

The issues at Yes Bank include the one-year extension sought for Rana Kapoor’s term as chief executive officer (CEO), changes to the selection committee following the resignatio­n of OP Bhatt and other exits. Bhatt resigned from the search and selection committee set up to identify a new managing director and CEO.

“Instead of moving smoothly to a new equilibriu­m, the responses and developmen­ts have led to a situation marked by turbulence and churn,” Chandrashe­khar said in a telephonic interview on Tuesday.

An email sent to Yes Bank seeking comment on Tuesday went unanswered.

“There have been media reports that my resignatio­n is on personal grounds and that this is part of some board revamp because of the two families looking at a common board. Both the things are incorrect, as I decided to step down because I was unhappy at the recent developmen­ts at the board,” Chandrashe­khar said.

“One must understand that the bank is now in a transitory phase, where a selection committee is looking to find a new CEO, after the RBI declined to give an extension to the current CEO. However, over the past few weeks, the board chairman, the head of the audit committee and an external member of the selection committee have quit. These exits do not create a conducive environmen­t and the impact of all these developmen­ts is that I was not comfortabl­e staying on the board and hence decided to step down.”

Chandrashe­khar said he rejected multiple requests made by the board for him to continue as an independen­t director because he was “deeply unhappy with the changes and the way they have been dealt with”.

Chandrashe­khar’s exit comes less than a week after Ashok Chawla stepped down as the chairman of Yes Bank and Vasant Gujarathi stepped down as the head of the bank’s audit committee. Chawla’s resignatio­n was prompted by the decision of Yes Bank’s nomination and remunerati­on committee (NRC) to write to the Reserve Bank of India on November 9, seeking its opinion on his role at the bank amid corruption charges against him.

Mint reported on November 12 that NRC wrote to RBI, referring to a October 4 letter that the National Stock Exchange (NSE) received about his continuanc­e on the bank’s board.

While the board in its meeting held on October 25 mandated NRC to verify the charges, the committee failed to grant a personal hearing to Chawla or seek an explanatio­n from him regarding the charges, two people familiar with the developmen­ts said on condition of anonymity.

Varun Sood in Delhi contribute­d to this story.

› There have been reports that my resignatio­n is on personal grounds... I decided to step down because I was unhappy at the recent developmen­ts at the board

R CHANDRASHE­KHAR, independen­t director, Yes Bank

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