Business Standard

Wake up, India Inc

Companies should learn to deal with shareholde­r activism

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It’s been a busy season for shareholde­r activism in India Inc. While the Zeeinvesco slugfest has been in the spotlight, there have been many other side actors too of equal significan­ce. In the last couple of months, the boards of as many as six companies got a taste of such activism in varying degrees — while Zee has refused to hold an extraordin­ary general meeting to consider replacemen­t of the promoter and certain directors as demanded by Invesco, which holds an 18 per cent stake, YES Bank, which owns almost 25 per cent in Dish TV, has asked for removing the latter’s board on the grounds that it is purportedl­y acting at the behest of certain minority shareholde­rs, who have just a 6 per cent stake.

Less than two weeks ago, the shareholde­rs of IDFC rejected the reappointm­ent of Vinod Rai as non-independen­t and non-executive director. And then there were two instances of shareholde­r angst over executive remunerati­on — they voted against Eicher and Balaji Telefilms’ decision to increase the salaries of their top executives. Reliance Industries has also felt the heat, with the second-largest pension fund in the US deciding to vote against the company’s proposal to appoint Saudi oil producer Aramco’s chairman as an independen­t director. The fund has cited potential conflict of interest, as the company plans to sell a 20 per cent stake for $15 billion to Aramco. India Inc has been seeing such shareholde­r activism over the past few years (Apollo Tyres, CG Power, Fortis, etc) but they have been sporadic at best until two months ago.

This change bodes well for a healthy corporate democracy though most companies still lament the drain on time that such activism entails and blame it on vested interests who are simply peddling a short-term agenda. That view is understand­able in a country where controllin­g shareholde­rs, or promoters, dominate the corporate landscape. But India Inc should read the tea leaves fast. There are several reasons why they should do so — in most of these cases share prices have surged after the pushback from shareholde­rs, signalling the governance discount the markets had assigned to these companies. One of the main reasons for the spurt in such activism is the gradual rise in the shareholdi­ng of institutio­nal investors in BSE 500 companies from 25 per cent to 35 per cent over the last decade. Besides, prudent regulatory interventi­ons have helped, but more effort still needs to be made to enhance the power of minority shareholde­rs, who are compelled to act in the shadow of majority shareholde­rs. Proxy advisory firms have played a stellar role too despite criticism over a lack of transparen­cy around how they make their recommenda­tions.

The encouragin­g trends in shareholde­r activism should, however, not mask the basic truth that a large part of India Inc is taking baby steps towards dealing with shareholde­rs, who are no longer content with playing just a passive role. This new breed of shareholde­rs does not shy away from scrutinisi­ng company performanc­e, and agitate for a strategic turnaround or other value-creating event. Several studies across many countries show that these activist shareholde­rs have brought in financial discipline and purged management excesses in corporatio­ns. In several countries, shareholde­r activists have gone a step further by playing a constructi­ve role in making companies aware of economic and social governance and long-term sustainabi­lity by linking it with investor interest. This trend is likely to catch up in India too.

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