Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Citigroup’s Jhaveri falls afoul of central bank

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MUMBAI: Citigroup Inc., the biggest foreign bank in India by assets, has joined a growing list of lenders that have seen their local leadership roiled by the nation’s central bank.

The Reserve Bank of India around t he end of l ast year i nformed Citi group t hat it wouldn’t approve a new term for Pramit Jhaveri, who had been India chief executive officer for almost a decade, people with knowledge of the matter said. That prompted the bank, which had planned to nominate Jhaveri for another three-year term, to change course and move him to another position, the people said, asking not to be named.

The RBI’S decision stemmed from personal investment­s by Jhaveri, said one of the people, without providing specifics. A representa­tive f or t he RBI didn’t respond to an email and phone calls seeking comment.

Indian regulators have tightened supervisio­n of the banking industry in the past year following a string of high-profile scandals, with the RBI denying term extensions for two CEOS of local banks since April. But Citigroup is the first foreign lender in recent times to have its leader- ship plans upended by the central bank.

Citigroup hasn’t applied for another term for Jhaveri and the bank won’t comment on regulatory matters, a spokesman for the lender said in an emailed statement. Jhaveri will take over as vice chairman for banking, capital markets and advisory in the Asia-pacific region after a new India CEO is named, and will remain based in Mumbai.

On January 11, the Reserve Bank of India announced that it had fined Citigroup’s India unit 30 million rupees ($422,000) for not f ully f oll owing “f i t and proper” criteria for the bank’s directors.

The statement didn’t make any reference to Jhaveri, but the fine was related to his personal investment­s, one of the people said.

 ?? MINT ?? Pramit Jhaveri
MINT Pramit Jhaveri

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