Business Standard

RBI allows promoters of Kotak Bank to hold 26% stake

Voting rights curtailed; private lender withdraws petition from court

- SUBRATA PANDA Disclosure: Entities controlled by the Kotak family have a significan­t holding in Business Standard Pvt Ltd

Private sector lender Kotak Mahindra Bank on Thursday said that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had given in-principle approval to its proposal on stake reduction in the bank and capping the promoters’ voting rights.

In a letter dated January 29, the RBI conveyed to the bank that the promoters would have to bring down their shareholdi­ng to 26 per cent of the paid-up voting equity share capital within six months of receiving the final approval from the central bank.

According to RBI rules, the bank was mandated to reduce promoter shareholdi­ng to 20 per cent by December 31, 2018, and to 15 per cent by March 2020. This rule has now been relaxed.

Promoters led by Managing Director and CEO Uday Kotak owned 29.96 per cent of the share capital as of December 2019.

However, the promoters’ voting rights will stand curtailed. The banking regulator said the promoters would have 20 per cent of the paid-up voting equity share capital until March 31, 2020, and it would be brought down to 15 per cent from April 1, 2020.

The central bank said that after the stake reduction, the promoters would not purchase any further paid-up voting equity shares of the bank till the percentage of their shareholdi­ng reached 15 per cent of the bank or such higher percentage as might be permitted by the RBI in future.

The RBI further said the promoters would be entitled to purchase additional shares of the bank’s equity capital up to 15 per cent or such higher percentage as might be permitted in the future, and exercise voting rights on such shares.

The private sector lender informed the stock exchanges that it had withdrawn the writ petition filed in the Bombay High Court against the regulator.

In December 2018, Kotak Mahindra Bank had moved the petition in the high court against the RBI after the central bank did not accept the reduction of promoter shareholdi­ng through an issue of preference shares.

In August 2018, the lender had issued perpetual non-convertibl­e preference shares, which it said would trim promoter shareholdi­ng from 30.3 per cent to 19.7 per cent, but the regulator did not agree with this method. The bank had sought interim protection from the RBI directive and proposed capping of voting rights of the promoters. The private lender was ready to issue an undertakin­g to limit its promoter voting rights to 20 per cent until May 2020 as concentrat­ion of power by the promoter was the main issue for the banking regulator. According to RBI norms, a bank needs to bring down its promoter shareholdi­ng to 40 per cent in the first three years after starting operations. Thereafter, the bank needs to bring down its promoter shareholdi­ng to 20 per cent in 10 years and 15 per cent in 15 years.

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