The Hindu (Chennai)

HC refuses to interfere with merger of Lakshmi Vilas Bank with DBS India

- Mohamed Imranullah S.

The Madras High Court on Friday refused to interfere with the decision taken by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), and approved by the Centre, in November 2020 to amalgamate Lakshmi Vilas Bank (LVB) with DBS Bank India Limited (DBIL), an Indian subsidiary of Developmen­t Bank of Singapore.

Chief Justice Sanjay V. Gangapurwa­la and Justice D. Bharatha Chakravart­hy, however, directed the RBI to value the shares and assets of both DBIL and LVB as on the date before the amalgamati­on and on that basis, take a decision afresh on reduction of value of shares and writing ož Tier II bonds.

Swap ratio

The court held that the value of the shares of LVB ought not to have been reduced to zero without evaluating the shares of DBIL and LVB and determinin­g the swap ratio which was highly essential to save the interests of the shareholde­rs and the bondholder­s who had approached the court against the merger.

The Bench agreed with the RBI that all was not well with LVB owing to the irregulari­ties committed by some of its directors and therefore, the central bank had to step in to save the interests of lakhs of depositors, especially when it found that a huge amount of deposits was being withdrawn from LVB on a daily basis.

The court, however, said the RBI should have ensured transparen­cy in the entire process of amalgamati­on and saved the interests of the shareholde­rs too. It said the central bank should not have rushed through the process of merger within eight days by rejecting more than 3,500 objections without disclosing the reasons.

“Though as an expert regulatory body, the decisions of the RBI are to be respected, the process undertaken by the RBI for amalgamati­on must be transparen­t. The RBI has stated that about 12 proposals were considered for the merger, but the terms and conditions put forth by those banking companies are not placed on record only on the ground of maintainin­g con dentiality. The same is not acceptable,” the Bench wrote. They went on to state: “Transparen­cy would be necessary to eradicate any suspicion and to allay the contention of the petitioner­s about favouring DBIL and giving LVB to DBIL on a platter.”

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