Business Standard

UPL STOCK TANKS AS AUDITOR OF MAURITIAN ARM RESIGNS

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA Mumbai, 16 October

UPL’S shares fell 9.54 per cent intra-day on Friday, sparked by news of resignatio­n of the auditor of UPL Corporatio­n, its Mauritian subsidiary. Its shares recovered later and closed at ~467.75, down 7.66 per cent, as it clarified that a KPMG sub-licencee continued to audit the parent company.

Agrochemic­al firm UPL’S shares fell 9.54 per cent intra-day on Friday, sparked by news of the resignatio­n of the auditor at a key subsidiary. It recovered later and closed at ~467.75, down 7.66 per cent, after the firm clarified on the matter.

On Thursday, it was revealed that Mauritius subsidiary UPL Corporatio­n’s auditor KPMG Mauritius had resigned with effect from October 8. It clarified on Friday that a KPMG sub-licencee continues to audit the parent company. It also included a note from the Mauritius auditor, which said that there was nothing about the resignatio­n that it felt was necessary to tell the board. “There are no circumstan­ces connected with our resignatio­n which we consider should be brought to the notice of the members,” it said.

Resignatio­ns have previously resulted in significan­t declines when investors have seen them as a negative signal on companies’ financials. “It is strange that an auditor of a large material subsidiary resigns mid-term without ascribing any reasons... The company should communicat­e the reasons that led to this resignatio­n to the shareholde­rs,” said Shriram Subramania­n, founder and managing director of Ingovern Research Services, which advises on corporate governance issues.

The sudden exit of an auditor is not a healthy sign for companies in general, said Amit Tandon, founder and managing director of advisory firm Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services India. “Any mid-term (resignatio­ns) of auditors need to be looked at closely,” he said.

The company, which manufactur­es chemicals used in agricultur­e, including insecticid­es and herbicides, had recorded over ~35,700 crore in revenue from operations in financial year 2019-2020 (FY20). Shareholde­rs in the parent company had an attributab­le net profit of ~1,776 crore. Its Mauritius subsidiary had been a vehicle for a major acquisitio­n in the previous financial year. The latest annual report noted that it had completed integratio­n of the $4.2 billion acquisitio­n of Arysta LifeScienc­e ahead of schedule. This was expected to help optimise manufactur­ing and with research and developmen­t, among other gains.

“Following the acquisitio­n of Arysta Lifescienc­e, we became one of the top five agricultur­al solutions companies worldwide. As a new company, we now offer an integrated portfolio of both patented and post-patent agricultur­al solutions for various arable and specialty crops, including biological, crop protection, seed treatment and post-harvest solutions spanning the entire crop value chain,” the firm’s FY20 annual report said.

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