Business Standard

Ahead of EGM, Fortis faces ministry probe

Director General to look into mismanagem­ent charges; three directors nominated by promoters quit

- VEENA MANI, ANEESH PHADNIS & SOHINI DAS

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) will start investigat­ion into alleged mismanagem­ent at Fortis Healthcare in the midst of the takeover battle for the company, but it is not considerin­g packing off the board and filling it with its nominees.

Meanwhile, three promoter-nominated directors — Harpal Singh, Tejinder Singh Shergill and Sabina Vaisoha — quit the company’s board a day ahead of the extraordin­ary general meeting (EGM) on May 22. Only Brian Tempest, also promoter-nominated, remains on the board.

Harpal Singh is the father-in-law of former promoter Malvinder Singh, while Tempest is former chief executive officer (CEO), Ranbaxy Laboratori­es.

Harpal Singh wrote in his resignatio­n letter: “Despite delivering a good outcome for the company and its shareholde­rs there still persist some less informed attempts to steer the board and the company into a situation that could be perilous for the company’s future.”

Besides the four, the Fortis board comprises four additional independen­t directors, three of whom have been nominated by shareholde­rs. They are Suvalaxmi Chakrabort­y, Indrajit Banerjee and Ravi Rajagopal, and shareholde­rs will vote on their appointmen­t as board members on Tuesday.

Key bidders for the group want the board to be strengthen­ed and a reversal of its earlier decision to select the Hero Enterprise­Burman bid to acquire the company.

Official sources say the ministry had received complaints regarding mismanagem­ent and referred the matter to the director general for investigat­ion.

If the government feels there is mismanagem­ent in a company, it can take it over. This was done in the case of Unitech and the National Spot Exchange.

Fortis did not respond to a query in this regard till the time of going to press.

The actions of the directors who have stepped down have come under investors' scrutiny, leading to the meeting on Tuesday. One of the actions is the decision to select the Hero Enterprise­Burman bid for Fortis Healthcare.

“The fact that three directors have stepped down means that they did not have the confidence to face the vote of the shareholde­rs,” a top executive of the firm said.

Shares of Fortis Healthcare were up 2.73 per cent at ~148.50 on the BSE.

Upon the request of two large institutio­nal shareholde­rs, Eastbridge Capital and Jupiter India Fund, the EGM has been called to overhaul the board.

A top executive of a firm that has put in its bid for Fortis Healthcare said: “The board needs to be strengthen­ed. It can then look afresh at all the binding offers in the way YES Bank has suggested.”

YES Bank is the largest shareholde­r in the hospital chain and controls over a 15 per cent stake in it. It declined comment.

“The board now has the opportunit­y to take a re-look at the bids and undertake the process in a well-defined and time-bound manner,” said Amit Tandon, managing director, Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services.

A company law expert said a decision taken by the board would not automatica­lly get overruled just because the board members had resigned but new members could do a review.

Earlier this month, the Fortis board chose the Hero Enterprise-Burman offer of ~18 billion, to be invested in two tranches, over the competing bids of the TPGManipal Hospitals combine, IHH Healthcare, and Radiant Lifecare.

Shareholde­rs criticised the Hero Enterprise-Burman offer because it supposedly did not offer them an exit route and there was no proposal for an open offer, said Arun Kejriwal, director at Kris Capital.

Three days after the board chose the Hero Enterprise­Burman offer, the TPGManipal Hospitals combine came up with a revised bid, raising its earlier offer by 12.5 per cent. In its latest offer, the combine proposed a preferenti­al allotment of ~180 per share.

Fortis has been facing trouble for over 18 months, with the Singh brothers, the promoters, caught in a case filed by Japanese drugmaker Daiichi Sankyo and then the auditor not willing to sign the company’s balance sheet.

Recently, Fortis Healthcare CEO Bhavdeep Singh said he had not been able to focus on the business over the past 1218 months.

Shares of Fortis Healthcare were up 2.73 per cent at ~148.50 on the BSE

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