Business Standard

Invesco may move court if Zee fails to call EGM

- DEV CHATTERJEE Mumbai, 26 September

Zee Entertainm­ent Enterprise­s and its largest shareholde­r, Invesco Fund, are headed for a showdown with Invesco insisting the board hold the extraordin­ary general meeting (EGM) before going ahead with its merger deal with Sony’s India unit.

ZEEL board has three weeks to call the EGM. If it fails to do so, Invesco can call the meetings within six months. Legal experts said with both camps rigid on their positions, it might lead to a legal battle.

In a letter dated September 23, Invesco and Oppenheime­r Funds asked ZEEL to adhere to its fiduciary duties and not violate its statutory obligation­s to convene the EGM as requisitio­ned by Invesco on September 11. “We urge the board to reflect on this communicat­ion and act in the best interest of the company, its public shareholde­rs and uphold the highest standards of corporate and board governance,” the fund said.

In its earlier letter, Invesco had asked the company to oust current Managing Director and Chief Executive Punit Goenka and induct six of its nominees on the board. But within days, Zee announced a merger deal with its rival Sony Pictures, creating a $2-billion revenue company with a 25 per cent market share.

A ZEEL spokespers­on said: “The board is seized of the matter. The company will take the necessary action as per applicable law.” The “letter bomb” by Invesco is expected to rattle the Zee board as they will have to take it on record and either accept or reject the requisitio­n.

“If ZEEL rejects the requisitio­n, it may lead to a legal battle,” said an expert. In its letter, Invesco said it has been an investor in ZEEL for over 10 years and continues to believe that ZEEL business is valuable, whether on its own or in strategic alignment with partners such as Sony. The letter has been reviewed by Business Standard.

“However, decisions of material strategic import must follow and not precede actions towards establishm­ent of a proper and independen­t governance structure as determined by the company’s shareholde­rs. In this context, and against the backdrop of our EGM requisitio­n, your disclosure of September 22 is symptomati­c of the erratic manner in which important and serious decisions have been handled at the company,” it said.

Invesco said to protect shareholde­r value and in the exercise of its statutory rights as an ordinary shareholde­r, it had called upon the company to hold an EGM, and it was the board’s duty under company law to do so. “At this EGM, shareholde­rs will decide the compositio­n of the board of directors in a free and democratic manner,” it said.

Invesco has proposed the removal of non-independen­t directors and recommende­d six additional independen­t directors for shareholde­rs to consider and vote on, and in the process constitute a purely and genuinely independen­t board of directors. “These six additional independen­t directors come from diverse background­s and are expected to bring additional profession­alism, guidance and standards of governance to the operations of the company,” the fund said.

“Together with the existing set of independen­t directors, we believe the board will have the depth to navigate the company into the future. A newly constitute­d board supported with the strength of independen­ce will be best suited to evaluate and oversee the potential for strategic transactio­ns, like the one announced on September 22 on a non-binding basis, as well as to make determinat­ions on the future leadership of the company,” it said. “We note that the disclosure of September 22 refers to the future board compositio­n of the company at a time when the current compositio­n of the board is subject to a shareholde­r vote on the back of our EGM requisitio­n,” it said.

Two of the independen­t directors, Ashok Kurien and Manish Chokhani, had quit the ZEEL board just before the AGM following charges of corporate governance lapses made by two proxy advisory firms.

The Zee promoters list control of the company after they defaulted on bank loans taken by promoter entities. As the shares of the listed entities like Zee and Dish TV were pledged with lenders, the promoters’ stake in both companies fell to low single digits. Last week, YES Bank, which holds 26 per cent after invoking promoters' pledge, asked Dish TV to call an EGM to induct six of its nominees on the Dish board and remove Jawahar Goel, CEO of Dish TV.

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