Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sebi gives India Inc two years to split CMD roles

MAJOR RELIEF 162 of top 500 firms have a chairperso­n, who is also MD, CEO

- Jayshree P Upadhyay jayshree.p@livemint.com

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Monday allowed two more years for companies to ensure their chairman has a non-executive role, in a major relief for companies that now get additional time for succession planning.

In a gazette notificati­on, Sebi extended the deadline for the change which, in effect, would have required companies to split the role of chairman and managing director (MD), and ensure the chairman is not related to the chief executive officer or managing director. The deadline, set in June 2018, required the top 500 companies to comply by April 2020.

Of the top 500 companies, 162 have the same person as chairperso­n, managing director and CEO, according to data compiled by NSE Infobase, run by Prime Database. In 52 other companies, the chairperso­n and MD/CEO are related.

Mint reported on January 10 that Sebi was considerin­g three options for a smooth transition, and one of them was to extend the deadline by two years.

A person familiar with the regulator’s thinking said on condition of anonymity that the deadline has been extended as many large companies were unprepared for the transition.

“India Inc. had cited reasons such as lack of global precedence, being ill-prepared for the move, and too short a deadline as some of the reasons,” the person said. “In a recent meeting with senior government representa­tives, India Inc. had also cited reasons such as this would be counterpro

n ductive to economic developmen­t as the corporates would need to rush to meet the short deadline.”

“This is a very positive step that the regulator has considered the concerns of India Inc. and has extended the deadline, which gives companies enough time to effect a restructur­ing,” said Haigreve Khaitan, senior partner at Khaitan and Co.

“Typically, for promoterdr­iven companies, it was particular­ly difficult since no other person except the promoter or family were a better fit for senior management posts.”

However, M Damodaran, a former chairman of Sebi, said the decision does not send a good signal.

“Companies had enough time to implement the decision. If they had gone about it seriously, there would have been no difficulty,” said Damodaran, chairperso­n of Excellence Enablers, a corporate governance firm.

The head of a large listed company said such a big change in the way companies structure themselves could not be done in a hurry. “It is a very controvers­ial topic given the names involved and expected to be affected by this. I believe that Sebi has done nothing wrong in extending the deadline because a change of this nature cannot be rushed and corporates need to be given time to readjust,” he said, adding that by deferring the implementa­tion, Sebi is not cancelling but only ensuring a smoother rollout.

According to Khaitan, the rule barring relatives as chairman and CEO/MD remains a concern. Sebi relies on the definition of a relative as per the Companies Act, 2013, which would effectivel­y prevent sons, daughters and close relatives from taking over the management while the family patriarch stays as chairman.

“Many times, the promoters, in terms of succession planning, groom their relatives (sons and daughters) to take up management roles; so, the persisting condition that they cannot be related is still a concern,” said Khaitan.

The person familiar with the regulator’s thinking said that Sebi might accept the Kotak committee’s original recommenda­tion allowing the two top posts to be related.

“The timing of this move was a little surprising, given how strongly Sebi was behind this earlier,” said Rishabh Shroff, partner at Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas.

“In terms of substantiv­e requiremen­ts, many promoter companies were more uncomforta­ble with the idea of a non-executive chairman. If a senior promoter is the majority owner, and had been running the company as well as remaining as chairman and managing director, to suddenly have him sit at home as non-executive chairman was unpalatabl­e. This requiremen­t has not gone away, just deferred. So, promoters have two years to see how to make this transition.”

“For many large listed enterprise­s, where the promoters would like to retain the position of chairman, it provides a longer runway to plan management succession,” said Harsh Pais, partner at Trilegal. “In most of these cases, promoters will benefit from the additional time to transition the managing director’s role to profession­al management.”

Shayan Ghosh in Mumbai and Biman Mukherji in Delhi contribute­d to this story.

THE DEADLINE, SET IN JUNE 2018, REQUIRED THE TOP 500 COMPANIES TO COMPLY BY APR 2020

 ??  ?? The markets regulator has given companies two more years to ensure the separation of roles of chairman and MD.
MINT
The markets regulator has given companies two more years to ensure the separation of roles of chairman and MD. MINT

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