Business Standard

Max Financial shareholde­rs approve non-compete fee

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N New Delhi, 27 September

The resolution for payment of ~850-crore non-compete fee to promoter group shareholde­rs of Max Financial Services led by Analjit Singh sailed through, with 65:35 majority among the votes polled. The fee was a critical element in the three-way merger deal between Max Financial Services, Max India and HDFC Life Insurance.

The non-compete agreement seeks to compensate Singh and associated entities for restrictio­ns to carry out life insurance, distributi­on, reinsuranc­e and pension businesses, his directorsh­ips and even financial investment­s in competing entities, directly or indirectly. The promoters would not be promoters of the merged entity and would not have any board seats.

Of the 185.72 million eligible votes held by minority shareholde­rs, only 139.95 million exercised their franchise through postal ballot and evoting. Of these, 90.5 million, or 64.67 per cent of the votes polled, went in favour of the resolution, while 49.43 million or 35.33 per cent went against, according to the voting details published by the company.

The company did not disclose the break-up of public institutio­ns and non-institutio­nal shareholde­rs that voted in the postal ballot process. Since the promoters were interested in the transactio­n, they did not participat­e in the voting.

Business Standard had last week reported that funds associated with private equity giant KKR and Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs, which together held about 25 per cent in the company, were in favour of the transactio­n. Assuming these voted in favour, that would account for about 67.84 million votes.

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