Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Indigo violated norms in some RPTS, finds regulator

Only some deals were approved by audit committee, probe finds

- Jayshree P Upadhyay and Rhik Kundu

MUMBAI: Interglobe Aviation Ltd has violated governance and listing guidelines in some of its related-party transactio­ns (RPTS), a regulatory investigat­ion found, sending shares of India’s largest airline operator plunging.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has sent its findings to an internal committee for possible penal action, two people aware of the investigat­ion said on condition of anonymity. Shares of Interglobe, which operates low-fare airline Indigo, fell as much as 7.6% on BSE on Tuesday, before closing 4.68% lower at ₹1,376.70, while the benchmark Sensex index fell 0.2%.

“The regulator has found that some of the RPTS, which were considered not material by the company, exceeded 1% of company turnover (the threshold for materialit­y) and thus needed shareholde­r nod,” said one of the two people cited above. The transactio­ns were conducted without shareholde­rs’ approval.

The Sebi investigat­ion also found that only some of the transactio­ns were approved by its audit committee after the transactio­ns occurred, said the second person.

The results of Sebi’s preliminar­y investigat­ion revive turbulence at the airline, which was rocked by a feud between its founders last year. Sebi had started investigat­ing Indigo after co-founder Rakesh Gangwal complained to the regulator in July 2019. In his complaint, Gangwal alleged violation of governance norms by Rahul Bhatia, the other co-founder.

Sebi also examined the contentiou­s shareholde­r agreement between the promoters, which gave the Bhatia-led group the right of first refusal to buy Gangwal’s stake if the latter decided to sell. On January 29, shareholde­rs rejected Gangwal’s proposal to amend Interglobe’s articles of associatio­n. Out of the total votes cast, 48.55% favoured the motion and 51.44% opposed it.

“While the shareholde­rs have ratified the current shareholde­r agreement, Sebi is within its rights to relook at the agreement if it finds violations against the small shareholde­rs. The supposed violations of RPTS can make a case for that,” said Ramesh Vaidyanath­an, founder of law firm Advaya Legal.

In his letter to Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi last year, Gangwal, a former chief executive of US Airways, alleged that there were several violations at Indigo, including those pertaining to RPTS and appointmen­t of senior management personnel, directors and the chairman, who has always been an independen­t director by convention. Bhatia had denied the charges.

While Gangwal and his associates hold nearly 37% in Interglobe Aviation, Bhatia’s Interglobe Enterprise­s (IGE) holds over 38%.

Indigo said in a statement that the company hasn’t received any communicat­ion from Sebi in this regard.

IGE and Gangwal didn’t respond to queries. An emailed query to Sebi remained unanswered.

Bhatia had earlier maintained that his RPTS with Indigo were worth only 0.53% of the airline’s annual revenue. He had also denied charges made by Gangwal against this.

Some of the instances cited by Gangwal include an office lease rental agreement, which was to expire in 2019. To ensure an arm’s length relationsh­ip, the company decided to negotiate with third parties for office space. Bhatia had said the lease agreement with the related party was favourable to the airline on several counts when compared to third parties.

Following this, Indigo informed the stock exchange in October that Interglobe Enterprise­s Pvt. Ltd (IGE Group) and Bhatia had submitted a request for arbitratio­n to the London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n under the shareholde­r agreement of Interglobe Aviation on April 23, 2015 between IGE Group and Rakesh Gangwal Group (RG Group).

 ?? MINT ?? The results of Sebi’s preliminar­y investigat­ion revive turbulence at the airline, which was rocked by a feud between its founders last year.
MINT The results of Sebi’s preliminar­y investigat­ion revive turbulence at the airline, which was rocked by a feud between its founders last year.

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