Business Standard

Unlisted firms having listed subsidiari­es face greater oversight

May be asked for regular financial results

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI

Companies such as Tata Sons and Bharti Telecom, which are unlisted but have listed subsidiari­es, may soon have to file periodic financial statements with the registrar of companies under the new provision of the Companies Act.

The provision requires greater financial disclosure­s by a certain category of unlisted companies.

“While disclosure­s are made by listed companies regularly, their holding firms only provide annual financial statements, with an 18month gap at that. We want to address this informatio­n asymmetry,” a senior government official told Business Standard.

The ministry is also considerin­g that the criteria to define this class should be based on borrowing. Companies with certain levels of borrowing and their exposure to banks, deposits, and debentures are likely to be brought under the purview of the new provision. "The idea is to increase accountabi­lity where public money is involved," the official added.

In the amended Companies Act, 2020, the corporate affairs ministry added a provision -- Section 129A -which empowers the government to ask a certain class of companies to prepare financial results periodical­ly and file a copy of those with the registrar within 30 days of completing the relevant period.

The provision also requires a company to “obtain approval of the Board of Directors and complete audit or limited review of such periodical financial results in such manner as may be prescribed”. The move is a result of a lack of financial oversight, which was brought to light after the IL&FS case.

While the ministry is yet to decide on the class of firms, the idea is to bring in greater accountabi­lity.

The ministry has also not decided whether the frequency of such disclosure­s should be made quarterly or half-yearly.

“Investors will have more and timely informatio­n and in that sense it is good for businesses,” the official said.

Besides the unlisted holding companies with listed subsidiari­es, the ministry is considerin­g that the criteria to define this class should be based on borrowing. Companies with certain levels of borrowing and their exposure to banks, deposits and debentures are likely to be brought under the purview of the new provision.

This would mean several public sector enterprise­s, insurers and banks would be affected by the change in the law.

The ministry is holding discussion with the Department of Public Enterprise­s and the Department of Financial Services to finalise the criteria.

According to people in the know, the government wants to wait for industry to tide over the Covid crisis before it implements this law.

The last amendments made to the Companies Act were to improve ease of doing business, with several sections decriminal­ised and compliance­s reduced. The ministry is keen to launch the new version of its portal as announced in the Budget ahead of defining the class of companies required to file financial statements.

Experts say this should be restricted to public interest entities. “This may include companies in the financial sector or those with large debt. This will provide early warning signs of any credit or systemic risks. Further, wholly owned subsidiari­es may be exempted if their parents are providing consolidat­ed financial informatio­n periodical­ly,” said Sudhir Soni, partner, SR Batliboi and Co LLP.

Industry experts say the government needs to utilise the informatio­n at hand better before seeking even more.

“The problem is not whether compliance­s or the number of forms is increased or decreased. The problem is smart analytics. We need someone to do intelligen­t analysis of the papers that are filed. The registrar has the biggest repository of data, which should be used to understand the corporate sector,” said Anshul Jain, partner, PWC India.

The PIL was filed by BJP leader Vinit Goenka in May 2020

It has urged the govt to create a mechanism to rein in fake news and provocativ­e ads and messages on social media

It claims that 10 per

> cent of the accounts on Twitter and Facebook in India are duplicate, bogus or fake

The SC notice comes > amid a govt-twitter standoff over content takedown requests

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