Business Standard

PNB HFC DEFENDS CARLYLE DEAL AFTER SEBI HALTS MOVE

Regulator wants report by independen­t valuer

- ABHIJIT LELE

The Securities and Exchange Board of India has asked PNB Housing Finance to keep on hold the proposal to seek the shareholde­rs’ nod for a preferenti­al allotment of equity until an independen­t valuation of shares was done. The housing finance firm was planning to issue shares and warrants on a preferenti­al basis to Carlyle Group and associates, which were reported to be investing ~4,000 crore to acquire a controllin­g stake of over 50 per cent in the Delhi-based mortgage lender.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has asked PNB Housing Finance (PNB HFC) to keep on hold the proposal to seek the shareholde­rs’ nod for a preferenti­al allotment of equity until an independen­t valuation of shares was done.

The housing finance firm was planning to issue shares and warrants on a preferenti­al basis to private equity firm Carlyle Group and associates, which were reported to be investing ~4,000 crore to acquire a controllin­g stake of over 50 per cent in the Delhi-based mortgage lender.

It was supposed to hold an extraordin­ary general meeting of shareholde­rs on June 22 to consider the preferenti­al allotment (shares and warrants). The price of each share and convertibl­e warrant is ~390.

On Friday its shares closed 1.4 per cent lower at ~739.35 per share on the BSE.

Sebi, in a communicat­ion to the housing finance firm, said the resolution about the issue of securities and related matters was “ultravires” of the Articles of Associatio­n (AOA). The resolution will not be acted upon until the company does the valuation of shares (for preferenti­al allotment) by an independen­t, registered valuer.

PNB HFC in a late night filing with the BSE said the company had acted in compliance with the laws, including pricing regulation­s prescribed by Sebi and the AOA.

Such preferenti­al allotment is in the best interests of the company, its shareholde­rs, and all relevant stakeholde­rs. The company is evaluating further steps in this regard. It, however, did not elaborate on its steps, including the shareholde­rs’ meeting.

Also in its communicat­ion (June 15, 2021) to the exchange, PNB HFC had said there was no prescribed methodolog­y required to be followed for valuing the shares of a listed entity, except the minimum pricing formula prescribed under the Sebi Regulation­s.

The formula is market-linked and the floor price is the higher of the two values determined on the basis of differing look-back periods with reference to the “relevant date” for the preferenti­al issuance. Hence, there is no prescribed distinctio­n between a pricing and a valuation certificat­e. The process followed was also in line with the market practice followed by listed companies.

Stakeholde­rs Empowermen­t Services, a governance watchdog, in a report earlier in June had said PNB HFC’S decision to allot shares and warrants to Carlyle Group, Aditya Puri, and others at ~390 apiece was “unfair” to public and other shareholde­rs.

PNB HFC had said the company had obtained a valuation report (May 29) for the preferenti­al issuance from the company’s statutory auditing firm BR Maheswari & Co LLP. It was reviewed and confirmed by Amresh Sood, partner of the firm who is a registered valuer. Also, the management had received a valuation report (dated May 31 provided by the lead investor). That report was issued by Vikram Kailash Jain, a registered valuer. The issue price for the preferenti­al issue (~390 apiece) was higher than the minimum floor price calculated in accordance with the Sebi Regulation­s (~384.60), as also borne out by the valuation reports.

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