SEBI tightens
screws on listed cos continuing with directors aged over 75
APRIL 2019 ONWARDS SPECIAL RESOLUTION IS NECESSARY
SEBI tightens
screws on listed cos continuing with directors aged over 75
From April, shareholder permission must to
continue board members over 75 years
MORE THAN 110 TOP LISTED COMPANIES HAVE TO PASS SPECIAL RESOLUTION
More than 110 top listed companies may have to change their
board composition or seek shareholder approval if they want to continue to have
one or more persons aged 75 years or more as a non-executive director on their
board.
From April 1, listed companies may no longer be able to continue
having directors aged 75 years and above, per a SEBI order, unless they pass a
special resolution and seek shareholder permission.
TROUBLE FOR FAMILY-RUN COS
If shareholders reject any such proposal, it could impact some family-run
companies that have founding promoters as non-executive board members and
continue having them till their demise.
Shareholder advisory experts say companies are rushing to pass
special resolutions and take shareholder approval for their continuance.
RELIANCE INDUSTRIES, MARUTI SUZUKI, LUPIN
Data provided by Prime Database, a market and company data
tracking website, show that some prominent companies, including Reliance
Industries, Maruti Suzuki, Lupin, Colgate-Palmolive, Procter & Gamble, DLF,
Kesoram Industries, Berger Paints, Emami, Glenmark, Apollo Hospitals and
Century Textiles, have at least one board member aged over 75.
Some of these companies may have already taken shareholders
approval for the continuance of such directors.
SPECIAL RESOLUTION
Any company that desires to continue such non-executive board
members will have to take shareholder permission via a special resolution and
even record the reason for such an act, a SEBI notification says.
COMPANIES ACT
2013 DOES NOT BAR MORE THAN AGED OVER 75 PERSONS TO ACT AS A DIRECTOR
“There is no law which says that companies cannot have board
members aged 75 years or above. Only, SEBI has mandated that a special
resolution needs to be passed and shareholder permission sought which many
companies are doing already. The SEBI rule is to ensure that people don’t
continue on company boards perpetually without seeking permission,” said JN
Gupta, founder of proxy advisory firm SES.
SEBI REQUIRES PRIOR
APPROVAL FROM MEMBERS BY SPECIAL RESOLUTION
Section 161 of the Companies Act, 2013, states that a person can
be appointed as an additional director in any board meeting and can be
regularised as a director in the next annual general meeting (AGM) with the
approval of shareholders. For the same, SEBI requires a ‘prior’ special
resolution while the Companies Act, 2013, allows such an approval to be taken
in next AGM.
Experts say that forcing companies to organise a special
resolution only to announce the age of the director appears to be a case of
regulatory overkill, mainly for those companies where directors attend 75-years
of age but there was long time for its AGM to carry on with SEBI’s
requirements.
Courtesy : Business Standard
Almost many companies have passsed the Resolution to appoint same directors having more than 75 years of Age? who is SEBI?
ReplyDeleteSEBI is regulatory authority. In fact there should be an amendment in Companies Act barring appointment of 75 years and above as Directors. This will allow new ideas and generate employment.
ReplyDelete