Business Standard

COURT TELLS SINGH BROTHERS TO PAY DAIICHI ~35 BN

Enforces arbitratio­n award related to the $4.6-bn sale of Ranbaxy in 2008

- VEENA MANI & BLOOMBERG

Malvinder Singh and Shivinder Singh, promoters of Fortis Healthcare, need to pay Japanese drugmaker Daiichi Sankyo ~35 billion ($550 million), awarded in arbitratio­n over the $4.6-billion sale of Ranbaxy Laboratori­es to Daiichi in 2008. The verdict was pronounced by the Delhi High Court’s single-judge Bench of Justice Jayant Nath. He rejected all objections raised by the Singh brothers and said the arbitratio­n award was in line with Indian laws and policy.

Malvinder Singh and Shivinder Singh, promoters of Fortis Healthcare, need to pay Japanese drug maker Daiichi Sankyo ~35 billion ($550 million), awarded in arbitratio­n over the $4.6-billion sale of Ranbaxy Laboratori­es to Daiichi in 2008.

The verdict was pronounced by the Delhi High Court’s singlejudg­e bench of Justice Jayant Nath. He rejected all objections raised by the brothers and said the arbitratio­n award was in line with Indian laws and policy. The ruling can still be appealed in a two-member panel of the Delhi HC or the Supreme Court.

The Japanese firm had moved the Delhi HC to enforce the arbitratio­n award announced by a Singapore tribunal, which had found that the brothers had concealed critical informatio­n at the time of selling Ranbaxy to Daiichi. The brothers had opposed implementa­tion of the award in India.

Daiichi has also been appealing to the Delhi HC to stop the brothers from selling their assets to ensure they have enough funds to pay up the arbitratio­n award. The brothers have been asked not to dilute their assets.

The HC said Daiichi can claim the amount from the brothers and their firms but not from their children, who were also named in the suit. RHC Holding, the holding firm of the brothers, said, “Today’s judgment has given partial success to some of the sellers of shares of erstwhile Ranbaxy (respondent­s). The HC has held the award to be unenforcea­ble against the minors. However, we are disappoint­ed with the ruling against the rest of the sellers. After studying the order in detail, the respondent­s will decide on further course of action.”

Daiichi didn’t immediatel­y respond to Business Standard’s email seeking comments. However, P&A Law Office, a firm representi­ng the Japanese company issued a statement. “Daiichi will now file an applicatio­n with the court seeking execution of the award with steps such as the sale of shares and assets held by firms controlled by the Singh brothers including Fortis Healthcare and Religare,” said Amit Mishra, a spokespers­on of the law firm. While shares of Religare Enterprise­s fell 3.1 per cent to ~43.20 a share on the BSE on Wednesday, Fortis declined 5.3 per cent to ~139.1 a share. The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex dropped 0.2 per cent on the day.

The brothers have been under pressure to sell assets to deal with debt at RHC Holding. The credit rating on RHC’s longterm non-convertibl­e debt was downgraded to ‘default’ by India Ratings & Research in July after RHC missed scheduled coupon payments on its non-convertibl­e debentures the previous month and reflects the group’s impaired ability to service debt, as per the rating agency.

The sale of Ranbaxy to Daiichi took place just months before the US Food and Drug Administra­tion banned imports from two of the generic drug maker’s Indian plants. That same year, the US department of justice launched a probe, resulting in a guilty plea by Ranbaxy and a $500-million settlement for selling adulterate­d drugs. The bothers were not named in the Ranbaxy probe.

In 2012, Daiichi filed a case with an Internatio­nal Court of Arbitratio­n in Singapore. In 2016, the tribunal decided the Singhs should pay Daiichi both damages and interest. Daiichi sold Ranbaxy to Sun Pharmaceut­ical Industries for $3.2 billion in 2014.

 ??  ?? Malvinder Singh (right) and Shivinder Singh
Malvinder Singh (right) and Shivinder Singh
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