Monday, December 8, 2025

THE 2025 IndiGo DISASTER –HOW TO AVOID IT IN FUTURE ?

 THE 2025 IndiGo DISASTER –HOW TO AVOID IT IN FUTURE ?


WHAT HAPPENED ?

Since late November 2025, IndiGo has cancelled thousands of flights nationwide — by December 7 the total cancelled flights were reported to be over 3,800.

On some days, more than 750 flights were cancelled across major airports (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad etc.).

The collapse in reliability was dramatic: on-time performance dropped to as low as 19.7 %.

REASONS FOR THE CRISIS

The crisis was caused largely by a shortage of available cockpit crew — triggered by newly implemented and stricter rules for pilot rest and duty time (the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) “Flight Duty Time Limitation” norms that increased mandatory rest hours for pilots, limited night-landings, and capped duty hours).

OUTCOMES AND WHAT WENT WRONG

The widespread cancellations left thousands of passengers stranded — complaints of long delays, last-minute cancellations, lack of communication or alternate flights, even basic support (food, rebooking) in many cases.

DGCA issued a show-cause notice to IndiGo’s top management for the operational failure.

 IndiGo reportedly processed refunds amounting to ₹610 crore under government direction

WHAT IndiGo SHOULD DO TO PREVENT FUTURE DISASTERS?

IndiGo Should Build sufficient staffing buffers and plan proactively for regulatory changes.

To Avoid over-reliance on “lean scheduling” or just-in-time crew deployment. Some slack/buffer must be built into scheduling so disruptions (weather, sickness, fatigue, leave) don’t cascade into systemic collapse.

ADOPT RISK-AWARE OPERATIONAL MODELS OVER PURELY COST-EFFICIENT MODELS

IndiGo should use scenario-based capacity planning: simulate what happens with moderate crew-shortage / flight-demand surges / weather disruptions / regulatory shifts — and build contingency plans.

When new regulations come from DGCA, the airline should communicate transparently to the regulator and public about its readiness: crew counts, roster planning, compliance status.

Periodic audits (internal and external) of crew-rosters, fatigue-management, crew-availability vs route schedule should be undertaken.

BETTER PASSENGER-CENTRIC CONTINGENCY PLANNING & COMMUNICATION

During IndiGo fiasco, majority of the IndiGo passengers complained that they have informed by the  IndiGo well in advance about the cancellation of flight.

Transparent communication through all possible channels (app, SMS, social media, airport announcements) to reduce confusion and distress among travellers.

5-POINT REFORM ROADMAP FOR INDIA’S AVIATION SECTOR (POST-INDIGO CRISIS)

·      Mandatory Crew-Capacity Planning & Stress-Testing

·      Regulatory Early Warning System (EWS)

·      Strengthening Competition & Market Resilience

·      Standardized Passenger Protection & Crisis Protocol

·      Technology-Driven Fatigue & Operations Management

POINTS JOSTLING IN OUR MIND

Is there any Risk Management committee is existing in IndiGo. If yes, why  it has not reviewed the DGCA ‘s “Flight Duty Time Limitation” norms that increased mandatory rest hours for pilots, limited night-landings, and capped duty hours and come out with the proper solution .

Why this fiasco cantered around IndiGo only – Why Air India, Vistara, Akasa Air, and SpiceJet were not affected is a million dollar question?

R V SECKAR,  FCS, LLB  79047 19295




Saturday, December 6, 2025

TATA CAPITAL PAYS RS 14.4 LAKH TO SEBI TO SETTLE REGULATORY VIOLATION IN THE ISSUANCE OF UNLISTED CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE PREFERENCE SHARES (CRPSS)

TATA CAPITAL PAYS RS 14.4 LAKH TO

 SEBI TO SETTLE REGULATORY

 VIOLATION  IN THE ISSUANCE OF

 UNLISTED CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE

 PREFERENCE SHARES (CRPSS) THAT

 WERE DEEMED A PUBLIC ISSUE AS IT

 HAD BEEN ISSUED TO MORE THAN 200

 INVESTORS IN A FINANCIAL YEAR




DETAILS OF THE REGULATORY VIOLATION

The matter relates to two instances where Tata Capital issued unlisted CRPSs on a private placement basis between April 2015 and March 2017. The issue arose because these shares were subsequently down-sold to more than 200 investors within a financial year, which, under the Companies Act 2013 and SEBI regulations, automatically classifies the issuance as a "public issue". Public issues are subject to stricter disclosure and compliance requirements, which the company allegedly did not follow. The Settlement Process

SUO-MOTU (VOLUNTARY) SETTLEMENT APPLICATION

Tata Capital submitted a suo-motu (voluntary) settlement application to SEBI, which allowed them to resolve potential enforcement proceedings without either admitting or denying the regulatory findings. The settlement amount of Rs 14.4 lakh was remitted by Tata Capital on October 24, 2025, after which SEBI declared the matter settled, effectively closing the regulatory chapter

LESSONS LEARNED FROM THIS CASE STUDY

This settlement is part of SEBI's framework that allows entities to avoid prolonged litigation by paying a fee and, if required, implementing corrective measures.

The issuance of these CRPSs is deemed to be a "public issue"  if it is issued to more than 200 investors in a financial year and the applicant is in violation of the provisions of Companies Act 2013 and SEBI's (Issue and Listing of Non-Convertible Redeemable Preference Shares) Regulations, 2013

TATA CAPITAL PAYS RS 14.4 LAKH TO SEBI TO SETTLE REGULATORY VIOLATION  IN THE ISSUANCE OF UNLISTED CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE PREFERENCE SHARES (CRPSS) THAT WERE DEEMED A PUBLIC ISSUE AS IT HAD BEEN ISSUED TO MORE THAN 200 INVESTORS IN A FINANCIAL YEAR


R V SECKAR,FCS, LLB, 79047 19295




TWO EBOOKS FOR SALE AT 50% DISCOUNT-Book 1- Compliance Issues in Corporates -Book -2 - Governance, Risk and Compliance

 TWO EBOOKS FOR SALE AT 50% DISCOUNT

Book 1- Compliance Issues in Corporates -247 pages

 

Book -2 - Governance, Risk and Compliance : A comprehensive approach for leaders page 60


The eBook titled Compliance Issues in Corporates and How to Mitigate It offers valuable insights for professionals by highlighting the serious financial, legal, and reputational risks associated with non-compliance and providing practical strategies to manage these challenges effectively.

Please scan the QR Code and make payment of Rs 1000/= and share the screen shot through email. PDF online copies and fillip eBook link will be sent through email.

 

R V SECKAR, FCS , LLB

79047 19295

Rvsekar2007@gmail.com




 





Saturday, November 29, 2025

COMPLIASCE OVERSIGHT TURNS EXPENSIVE FOR IQMETRIX AND IT PAID RS 13 LACS PENALTY OVER NON-COMPLIANCES

 

COMPLIANCES OVERSIGHT TURNS EXPENSIVE FOR IQMETRIX AND IT PAID RS 13 LACS PENALTY OVER NON-COMPLIANCES

TWO FOREIGN DIRECTORS WERE FINED-SIGNIFIES USE OF PROFESSIONAL ADVISES TO OVERCOME NON-COMPLIANCES

ROC Bangalore VS IQMETRIX Software Development India Private Limited



ROC Bangalore, has recently issued multiple adjudication orders under Section 454 of the Companies Act, 2013 against IQMETRIX Software Development India Private Limited for various statutory non-compliances. All matters were initiated through suo-motu applications filed by the company, admitting the lapses.


𝑪𝒐𝒎𝒎𝒐𝒏 𝑫𝒊𝒓𝒆𝒄𝒕𝒐𝒓𝒔 𝑷𝒆𝒏𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒆𝒅 𝑨𝒄𝒓𝒐𝒔𝒔 𝑶𝒓𝒅𝒆𝒓𝒔:

Christopher David Krywulak, Kelly Dean Kazakoff and Shailesh Srivastava

𝑪𝒐𝒎𝒑𝒍𝒊𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒆 𝑰𝒏𝒔𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔:

Timely filing of MBP-1 is essential to disclose directors’ interests.

Mandatory Board Meetings must be convened within prescribed frequency.

Financial statements must be approved by the Board before signing.

Share certificates must be issued within 60 days to avoid penalties.

Suo-motu action is viewed positively but does not eliminate penalty exposure.

💡 𝑻𝒂𝒌𝒆𝒂𝒘𝒂𝒚 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝑪𝒐𝒓𝒑𝒐𝒓𝒂𝒕𝒆𝒔 & 𝑷𝒓𝒐𝒇𝒆𝒔𝒔𝒊𝒐𝒏𝒂𝒍𝒔

- Even unintentional delays or procedural lapses can lead to significant financial penalties.

- Strong governance, regular compliance reviews, and board oversight mechanism

Courtesy :

SUDHA VASUDEVAN

 

R V SECKAR,FCS,LLB ,79047 19295,




SEBI (LODR) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2025--MAJOR CHANGES AND IMPACT FOR LISTED ENTITIES

 SEBI (LODR) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2025--MAJOR CHANGES AND IMPACT FOR LISTED ENTITIES

CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK TO SEE THE LINKEDIN POSTING


https://www.linkedin.com/posts/activity-7400505019353030656-z4KU?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAE_E5oBjgpaFS276L2s04BDTAB37RGoZu8

Thursday, November 27, 2025

DIRECTORS SIGNED FINANCIALS WITHOUT BOARD’S APPROVAL- ROC BENGALURU IMPOSED A FINE ON THE COMPANY AND DIRECTORS RS 4,50,000

 DIRECTORS SIGNED FINANCIALS WITHOUT BOARD’S APPROVAL- ROC BENGALURU  IMPOSED A FINE ON THE COMPANY AND DIRECTORS RS 4,50,000

ROC,BENGALURU VS IQMETRIX SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT INDIA PVT LTD

FACTS OF THE CASE

ROC observed that the financial statements had been signed by directors without the financials being first approved by the Board of Directors, as required under the Companies Act, 2013.

 

SECTION 134(1) & 134(2) – COMPANIES ACT, 2013

Financial statements must be approved by the Board before they are signed.

 

Signing of financial statements must be done after such approval, by:

·      Chairperson (if authorized), or

 

·      Two directors (one must be MD, if any), or

·      CEO/CS (where appointed).

SECTION 134(8)

Non-compliance with Section 134 attracts penalties on the company and every officer in default.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

·      Board approval of financial statements is non-negotiable.

·      Even if financials are correct, procedural non-compliance attracts penalties.

COMPANIES MUST:

·      Hold a valid Board meeting,

·      Record approval in minutes,

·      Then sign and file the financials.

NON COMPLIANCE

·      It was an inadvertent mistake or procedural lapse.

·      No intention to evade or suppress information.

·      Financials were accurate; only the approval process was missed.

Despite of the above facts, it is an offence to sign the financials by the directors without Board’s approval.

This case is highlighting that it is important for the companies to engage a company secretary to give them correct advice to avoid penalties.

R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB, 79047 19295

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

SIMPLIFIED PROCESS FOR ISSUING DUPLICATE SHARE CERTIFICATES BY SEBI

 

SIMPLIFIED PROCESS FOR ISSUING DUPLICATE SHARE CERTIFICATES BY SEBI




SEBI’S CONSULTATION PAPER

SEBI’s consultation paper proposes to simplify and standardize the process for issuing duplicate securities certificates to enhance ease of investment.

The consultation paper proposes raising the simplified documentation threshold from Rs. 5 Lakhs to Rs. 10 Lakhs.

PRESENT REQUIREMENT FOR ISSUE OF DUPLICATE CERTIFICATE

CURRENTLY, INVESTORS MUST SUBMIT

1.A copy of FIR/police complaint/court order,

2.Publish a newspaper advertisement, and

3.Provide separate affidavit and indemnity bonds, except when the value of securities is below Rs. 5 Lakhs.

PROPOSED SIMPLIFIED DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS

Investors would no longer need to furnish lengthy or complex paperwork.

The proposed framework includes:

1.Standard templates for applications

2.Streamlined affidavit/indemnity formats

3.Relaxed requirement for surety in certain cases

4. SEBI is considering reducing notarisation/legal formalities, especially for small shareholders, to improve ease of doing securities-related processes.

5. Greater use of digital modes, e-verification and online workflow, enabling quicker turnaround time by RTAs/companies.

6. Still the shareholder has to file a FIR

ENHANCED INVESTOR PROTECTION

While simplifying procedures, SEBI also proposes safeguards such as:

1.Mandatory PAN / KYC verification

2.Intimation to registered contact details before issuing a duplicate certificate

3.Strict timelines for RTAs to respond

ADVANTAGES

SEBI Says this move would simplify procedures, minimize costs to shareholders and will offer restitute rights for those who hold securities in physical forms.

R V SECKAR FCS,LLB 79047 19295