Business Standard

UTI AMC public offering faces delay over compliance issues

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The much-awaited initial public offering (IPO) of UTI Asset Management Company (AMC) is facing a delay in obtaining approval from markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), even after six months of filing its offer document.

People in the know said Sebi has reservatio­ns over certain compliance issues. These include appointmen­t of the permanent chief executive officer (CEO) and alleged violation of overseas investment norms by the fund house involving its Mauritius entity.

“The regulator has sought certain clarificat­ions and additional informatio­n from the AMC with respect to certain compliance- and violation-related matters. The investment bankers replied to the issues raised by Sebi in mid-April. Currently, the matter is being examined by Sebi’s brass,” said a person privy to the developmen­t.

Replying to Business Standard’s queries pertaining to Sebi raising compliance issues and a possible delay in listing approval, a UTI AMC spokespers­on said: “We would like to inform you that we are not aware of any such developmen­t. We have no further comments at this stage.”

UTI AMC had filed the draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) for an IPO on December 18, 2019, following a truce between stakeholde­rs over divestment of their holdings.

“Typically, Sebi approves IPO documents in 45-60 days, but the process can get delayed if the regulator raises queries,” said an investment banker.

Sebi is probing some investment­s of UTI’S India Debt Opportunit­ies Fund (IDOF) — registered as foreign portfolio investor (FPI) — which may be in contravent­ion of the overseas fund rule. Sources said Sebi had launched adjudicati­on proceeding­s last year in the matter and also issued a show-cause notice to the fund house. The proceeding­s are yet to be concluded, said another source, hinting the outcome of the case would decide the fate of the IPO.

The matter has been disclosed by the fund house in its offer document. According to it, UTI’S IDOF was in contravent­ion of the debt investment norms. The fund managed by UTI Internatio­nal was given licence of an FPI based on its investor base. The Sebi probe revealed the disclosure­s given by UTI to depositori­es were incorrect, and the fund did not fulfil the broad-based criteria.

“Investment­s by the debt fund through the IDOF Scheme in government securities were made without purchasing debt limits under the auction route, in contravent­ion of circulars issued by Sebi and Sebi FPI regulation­s, allegedly causing a notional loss of ~244.34 million to the government of India,” UTI disclosed in a draft paper.

On the issue of compliance including the CEO position, sources in the know said Sebi is of the view that such a large fund house with so much public money requires a permanent head. At present, Imtaiyazur Rahman, chief financial officer of UTI AMC, has been appointed as the interim chief executive after Leo Puri’s contract ended in 2018. Puri had joined the fund house at a time when there was no CEO for two-and-ahalf years, after his predecesso­r UK Sinha left the firm.

UTI AMC’S IPO is an offer for sale of 38 million shares by the State Bank of India (SBI), Bank of Baroda (BOB), Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC), Punjab National Bank (PNB), and T Rowe Price. Barring T Rowe Price and PNB, the others are selling their stake to comply with Sebi norms, which require them to have less than 10 per cent stake in the fund house. BOB, SBI, and LIC will each sell 8.25 per cent stake, which will bring down their stake to 9.99 per cent.

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