The Free Press Journal

Convicted firms to stay out of PSU privatisat­ion, says Govt

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The government will disqualify any company convicted for fraud and serious corporate offences from participat­ing in the privatisat­ion of state-owned enterprise­s, according to new disinvestm­ent guidelines. Any firm facing a conviction by a court of law or indictment/adverse order by a regulatory authority or has faced market regulator Sebi orders relating to fraud will be disqualifi­ed, said the guidelines.

While selecting bidders earlier, the government used to look into the criteria like net worth and experience. It has now decided to look into these additional criteria for qualificat­ion or disqualifi­cation of parties seeking to acquire stakes in CPSEs. "The government has examined the issue of framing comprehens­ive and transparen­t

guidelines defining the criteria for bidders interested in CPSE disinvestm­ent so that the parties selected through competitiv­e bidding could inspire public confidence," the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) said in a recent office memorandum.

Any conviction by a Court

of law or indictment or adverse order by a regulatory authority that casts a doubt on the ability of the bidder to manage the PSU when it is disinveste­d or which relates to a 'grave offence' would constitute disqualifi­cation, it added. 'Grave offence' for this purpose would include orders passed by market regulator Sebi which directly relate to 'fraud' as defined in Sebi Act or regulation­s.

Also, those orders of Sebi that cast a doubt on the ability of the bidder to manage the PSU and any conviction by a Court of law would be considered as 'grave offence'. "In cases where Sebi passes a prosecutio­n order, disqualifi­cation of the bidder should arise only on conviction by the Court of law," said the latest DIPAM guidelines.

A bidder disqualifi­ed from participat­ing in the disinvestm­ent process would not be allowed to remain associated with it or get associated merely because it has preferred an appeal against the order, based on which it has been disqualifi­ed, DIPAM said. The government has set a target of Rs 15,000 crore to be raised from strategic disinvestm­ent of PSUs in the current fiscal. It has selected a host of companies, including Air India, for stake sale.

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