Hindustan Times (Noida)

Zerodha plans ₹200-cr ESOP buyback

- Tarush Bhalla & Anirudh Laskar tarush.b@livemint.com

BENGALURU/MUMBAI: Online brokerage Zerodha aims to roll out a buyback plan for its employees worth ₹200 crore at a self-assessed valuation of $2 billion, a senior executive of the company told Mint on Friday.

Close to 850 employees, or 85% of Zerodha’s employee base, will be eligible to participat­e in the buyback, which is expected to be rolled out in July. It will allow employees to sell up to 33% of their vested employee stock ownership plans (ESOPS) to the company at a valuation of $2 billion.

Zerodha converted itself into a public limited company in 2019 and at present its employees own 6-6.5% stake through ESOPS. Zerodha will allocate newer ESOPS this year, which may push the overall ESOP pool to an 8% shareholdi­ng in the company.

“We continue to run Zerodha in the most cost-effective way and have gross margins up to 60%-70%. Our ambition is to keep rewarding our employees who have contribute­d to this journey, along with the annual growth they achieve for Zerodha. The idea is to give 10% of our profits to buybacks every year,” said Zerodha co-founder Nithin Kamath.

For the fiscal year ending March 2021, Zerodha more than doubled its profit to ₹1,000 crore, Kamath told Mint. Zerodha made ₹442 crore in profit in fiscal 2020, while posting a 15% growth in revenue at ₹1,093.64 crore, up from ₹950 crore in FY19.

The company passed a special resolution approving an annual remunerati­on of up to ₹100 crore each for its founders,

Nikhil Kamath, Nithin Kamath and his spouse Seema Patil, according to regulatory filings.

The three will get a basic salary of ₹4.17 crore per month each, along with perks and allowances of the same amount, adding up to a neat ₹100 crore as salary per year each.

Nithin Kamath told Mint that the approval may not essentiall­y mean that the founders would draw out ₹100 crore as final salaries from the company.

“It is just the upper limit and may differ from the actual salaries we are drawing from the company. We have always drawn a certain portion of the profits and kept it away to mitigate any kind of company risks in the future,” he said.

As the company does not look to raise external capital, it has to raise liquidity for founders and employees, Kamath said. “We aren’t looking at selling our stake to raise liquidity. The options that are left for us to raise liquidity include salaries, dividends, and buybacks. We may exercise any of these options,” said Kamath.

{ NITHIN KAMATH } FOUNDER & CEO, ZERODHA

To help customers, we have to do things that may not be good for the business in the short run & we may os lose revenues.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India