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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

ASM TECHNOLOGIES RECEIVES RS. 25,40,000 FINE FROM BSE FOR WARRANT CONVERSION LISTING DELAY IN FY 2026

 ASM TECHNOLOGIES RECEIVES RS. 25,40,000 FINE FROM BSE FOR WARRANT CONVERSION LISTING DELAY IN FY 2026


FACTS

ASM Technologies Limited was fined Rs. 25,40,000/- (excluding GST) by BSE Limited during the financial year ended 31st March 2026 for delayed filing of a listing application for equity shares allotted upon conversion of warrants, in violation of Schedule XIX Para 2 of SEBI (ICDR) Regulations, 2018. The company's management described the lapse as technical and unintentional.

 

COMPANY:

ASM Technologies Limited

REGULATOR:

BSE Limited

FINE AMOUNT:

₹25,40,000 (excluding GST)

FINANCIAL YEAR:

FY26 (ending March 31, 2026)

VIOLATION:

Delay in filing listing application for equity shares allotted upon warrant conversion.

REGULATION BREACHED:

Schedule XIX Para 2 of SEBI (ICDR) Regulations, 2018.

TIMELINE REQUIREMENT:

Filing must be completed within 20 days of allotment; ASM exceeded this period.

MANAGEMENT RESPONSE:

Called the lapse technical and unintentional, with no willful disregard for compliance

IMPLICATIONS FOR ASM TECHNOLOGIES

FINANCIAL IMPACT:

While ₹25.4 lakh is not massive for a listed company, it signals regulatory scrutiny.

REPUTATION RISK:

 Even “technical lapses” can affect investor confidence, especially in compliance-heavy sectors.

OPERATIONAL LESSON:

Companies must strengthen internal compliance monitoring to avoid delays in filings.

RISKS & TAKEAWAYS

FOR INVESTORS:

This fine is not linked to fraud or financial misreporting, but rather a procedural delay. Still, repeated lapses could raise red flags.

FOR COMPANIES:

Regulators are increasingly strict on timelines; even minor delays can attract significant penalties.

FOR MARKET WATCHERS:

Such fines highlight SEBI’s push for transparency and timely compliance in capital markets.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

It is to be noted that no actions were taken against the ASM TECHNOLOGIES, listed entity, its promoters, directors, or subsidiaries either by SEBI or by any stock exchange during the review period, other than the BSE fine noted above.

The company was also found to be in compliance with the SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 2015, including Regulations 3(5) and 3(6).

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Monday, May 11, 2026

CENTRE OPERATIONALISES LABOUR CODES, PUBLISHES RULES-- WITH THE LATEST GAZETTE NOTIFICATION OF RULES, THE ENTIRE LABOUR CODE FRAMEWORK IS NOW FULLY FUNCTIONAL NATIONWIDE

 CENTRE OPERATIONALISES LABOUR CODES, PUBLISHES RULES-- WITH THE LATEST GAZETTE NOTIFICATION OF RULES, THE ENTIRE LABOUR CODE FRAMEWORK IS NOW FULLY FUNCTIONAL NATIONWIDE


FULLY OPERATIONALISED

The Centre has fully operationalized India’s new labour law framework by notifying the final rules for all four labour codes in the official gazette, completing a major labour reform process initiated over five years ago.

The four codes broaden worker protection, easing business operations and promoting a pro-worker labour ecosystem.

THE FOUR CODES:

The Code on Wages (2019), Industrial Relations Code (2020), Code on Social Security (2020), and Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code (2020), officially came into force on November 21, 2025.

GAZETTE NOTIFICATIONS

In over 30 gazette notifications issued on Friday (May 8, 2026) and Saturday (May 9, 2026), the Union government fully operationalized the four Labour Codes. Officials maintained that the rules had been published with “minor amendments” to the draft rules pre-published in December 2025.

MAJOR PROVISIONS:

·      Eight-hour workday and 48-hour weekly cap.

·      Mandatory weekly rest days; overtime pay for work on rest days.

·      Digital compliance: electronic registers, wage slips, claims, and notices.

·      Record-keeping: employers must preserve wage, overtime, and attendance records for 5 years.

·      National floor wage to be fixed by Centre in consultation with states.

·      Social security coverage extended to gig and platform workers, funded by aggregator contributions.

·      Equal wages for men and women

·      Maternity leave increased from 12 to 26 weeks

·      Work-from-home provisions for women

·      Annual free health check-ups for workers aged 40+

·      A National Reskilling Fund for unemployed workers needing retraining.

WHAT CHANGED FROM DRAFT RULES?

DROPPED MINIMUM WAGE FORMULA:

 The earlier calorie/clothing/housing-based formula (from the 1991 Supreme Court Reptakos Brett case) was removed. Minimum wage criteria will now be separately specified by the Centre. Experts warn this could lead to lower wages and greater disparities across states.

MODEL STANDING ORDERS 2026:

 Applicable to mining, manufacturing, and services sectors; require detailed worker records including mobile number, email, and ESI number.

IMPACT ON STAKEHOLDERS

EMPLOYEES:

·      Payslips may show reduced take-home pay due to restructured wage definitions.

·      Gig workers gain statutory social security rights for the first time.

EMPLOYERS (ESPECIALLY MSMES & IT FIRMS):

·      Payroll structures must be reworked.

·      Compliance burden shifts to digital record-keeping.

·      Thresholds (100–300 workers) for certain provisions may affect hiring flexibility.

STATES ROLE

·      Central rules apply mainly to sectors under Union jurisdiction (telecom, banking, insurance, mines, ports, aviation, PSU contractors).

·      States must notify their own rules to complete implementation.

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

India’s labour law overhaul is now legally in force, but its real-world impact will depend on how states implement their rules and how employers adapt payroll and compliance systems. For workers, especially in the unorganised and gig economy, this reform promises broader protections—though wage fairness remains a contested issue.

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Sunday, May 10, 2026

SEBI PROPOSES BUY-BACK RULE CHANGES TO EASE COMPLIANCE BURDEN ON LISTED COMPANIES

 SEBI PROPOSES BUY-BACK RULE CHANGES TO EASE COMPLIANCE BURDEN ON LISTED COMPANIES


A MAJOR OVERHAUL

SEBI has proposed a major overhaul of buyback rules for listed companies, reintroducing open market buybacks via stock exchanges, reducing compliance burdens like mandatory merchant banker appointments, and tightening safeguards around promoter participation and public shareholding. The consultation paper is open for public comments until May 29, 2026.

KEY PROPOSED CHANGES THROUGH STOCK EXCHANGES

RETURN OF OPEN MARKET BUYBACKS

Open market buybacks through stock exchanges, discontinued in April 2025, are set to be reintroduced.

This move aligns with recent tax changes that treat buyback proceeds as capital gains, eliminating earlier arbitrage.

SHORTER BUYBACK TIMELINE

 

Maximum duration capped at 66 working days (instead of six months).

Companies must deploy at least 40% of earmarked funds in the first half of the buyback period.

REDUCED COMPLIANCE BURDEN

Appointment of a merchant banker becomes optional, lowering costs for companies.

ENHANCED SHAREHOLDER COMMUNICATION

Companies must electronically notify shareholders within one working day of a buyback announcement.

PROMOTER & PUBLIC SHAREHOLDING SAFEGUARDS

Promoter holdings will be frozen at the ISIN level during buybacks (with limited exemptions).

Buybacks explicitly linked to minimum public shareholding (MPS) norms to prevent breaches.

REGULATORY CONSISTENCY

Gap between two buybacks aligned with the Companies Act, 2013, replacing the current one-year restriction within one year ('twelve months') that is from the date of closure of the preceding buyback offer.

TRADING MECHANISM:

The requirement for a separate trading window is scrapped; buy-backs can happen through the regular market channels.

 

SHIFT IN RESPONSIBILITY:

Procedural duties will move from merchant bankers to companies, stock exchanges, and secretarial auditors.

COMPARISON: OLD VS PROPOSED FRAMEWORK

Aspect

Old Rules (till 2025)

Proposed 2026 Changes

Open Market Buybacks

Discontinued (Apr 2025)

Reintroduced via stock exchanges

Timeline

Up to 6 months

Max 66 working days

Utilisation Requirement

40% in first half

Retained

Merchant Banker Requirement

Mandatory

Optional

Shareholder Notification

No strict timeline

Within 1 working day

Promoter Participation

Limited safeguards

Frozen holdings, stricter norms

Gap Between Buybacks

1 year

Aligned with Companies Act

 

RISKS & TRADE-OFFS

  • Shorter timeline may pressure companies to act quickly, potentially reducing flexibility.
  • Optional merchant banker role lowers costs but could reduce professional oversight.
  • Promoter restrictions may limit flexibility for controlling shareholders.
  • Tax parity removes arbitrage but could reduce attractiveness of buybacks compared to dividends

PRACTICAL IMPACT ON LISTED COMPANIES

If implemented, the proposals may:

·       Reduce compliance costs,

·       Provide faster capital restructuring options,

·       Improve flexibility in treasury management,

·       Simplify execution procedures,

·       While simultaneously tightening governance oversight around promoter actions and shareholder protection.

# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Friday, May 8, 2026

SPECIAL RESOLUTION PASSED FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR FAILED – BUT STILL DCB BANK IS ABLE TO APPOINT THAT INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR – HOW ?

 SPECIAL RESOLUTION PASSED FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR FAILED – BUT STILL DCB BANK IS ABLE TO APPOINT THAT INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR – HOW ?

APPOINTMENT OF ID- THOUGH LOST AS SPECIAL RESOLUTION- BUT REGULATION 25 (2A) OF SEBI LODR COMES TO THE RESCUE !! INTERESTING CASE STUDY OF DCB BANK LTD

FAILURE OF SPECIAL RESOLUTION

DCB BANK LTD’s recent case of appointment of Suhail Amin Nathani  as Independent director of the bank highlights how Regulation 25(2A) of SEBI LODR saved the appointment of an Independent Director even though the special resolution failed—since a majority of shareholders (including public shareholders) voted in favor, the appointment was deemed valid.

SHAREHOLDERS’ VOTES IN FAVOR EXCEEDED THOSE AGAINST

The special resolution did not achieve the required 75% majority.

More than 50% of shareholders voted in favor, and crucially, public shareholders’ votes in favor exceeded those against.

Under Regulation 25(2A) of SEBI LODR, the appointment was still deemed valid despite failing as a special resolution.

REGULATION 25(2A) – THE RESCUE CLAUSE

 This provision was Introduced in 2022 to prevent governance deadlocks in LODR by SEBI.

PROVISION:

If a special resolution for appointment/reappointment/removal of an Independent Director fails, but:

Votes in favor > votes against, and

Public shareholders’ votes in favor > votes against,

→ then the appointment/removal is deemed approved.

DCB BANK CASE – LESSONS

SHAREHOLDER DEMOCRACY:

Even though the special resolution failed, the majority’s will have prevailed.

PRACTICAL SAFEGUARD:

Regulation 25(2A) ensures Independent Directors aren’t hostage to promoter disagreements.

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IMPACT:

Reinforces SEBI’s intent to balance transparency, independence, and shareholder rights.

QUICK COMPARISON WITH NORMAL WITH THAT OF REGULATION 25(2A) EXCEPTION

REQUIREMENT

NORMAL RULE

REGULATION 25(2A) EXCEPTION

Appointment of ID

Needs special resolution (75%)

Valid if majority + public shareholders’ majority support

 

 

 

Risk

Appointment blocked despite majority

Appointment goes through

 

 

 

Beneficiaries

Promoters can block

Public shareholders’ voice prevails

TAKEAWAY:

DCB Bank’s case is a textbook example of how Regulation 25(2A) of SEBI LODR acts as a safety net—ensuring Independent Directors can be appointed when majority support exists, even if the special resolution technically fails.

#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

WHETHER SHRI KUMAR MANGALAM BIRLA APPOINTEMENT AS THE NON-EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN OF VODAFONE IDEA (VI) WILL TURNAROUND THE VODAPHONE IDEA?

 WHETHER SHRI KUMAR MANGALAM BIRLA APPOINTEMENT AS THE NON-EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN OF VODAFONE IDEA (VI) WILL TURNAROUND THE VODAPHONE IDEA?



WHY VODAPHONE IS APPOINTING KUMAR MANGALAM BIRLA AS THE NON-EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN, EFFECTIVE MAY 5, 2026. WHO IS ALREADY SERVING AS A NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF VODAPHONE?

TO REINFORCE PROMOTER COMMITMENT

Vodafone Idea (Vi) appointed Kumar Mangalam Birla as Non-Executive Chairman to signal a strategic reset and reinforce promoter commitment as the company attempts a long-term turnaround.

FINANCIAL CHALLENGES AND INTENSE COMPETITION

Kumar Mangalam Birla is stepping into this leadership role at a crucial time for the telecom operator, which has been navigating financial challenges and intense competition in India’s telecom sector.

CHAIRMAN OF THE ADITYA BIRLA GROUP

Birla is the Chairman of the Aditya Birla Group, one of India’s largest conglomerates, and has been closely associated with Vodafone Idea since its formation through the merger of Idea Cellular and Vodafone India. His return to the chairman’s seat is seen as a significant move, signaling stronger promoter involvement in steering the company’s future.

KEY REASONS FOR THE APPOINTMENT

PROMOTER CONFIDENCE:

His return to the helm is seen as a "reposing of faith" by the Aditya Birla Group in the debt-laden telco.

FUNDING PUSH:

The move coincides with Vi's efforts to secure fresh debt and equity funding (aiming for up to ₹35,000 crore) to support critical capital expenditure.

AGR LIABILITY CLARITY:

 The Department of Telecommunications recently reduced Vi’s Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR) dues by 27% (to ₹64,046 crore), easing a major financial overhang and reviving investor interest.

OPERATIONAL STABILITY:

Following years of subscriber losses and financial stress, Birla's seasoned leadership is intended to boost lender and investor confidence as the company targets three-fold EBITDA growth in three years.

CURRENT FINANCIAL POSITION (FY26)

MARKET PRICE (APRIL 2026):

₹8 PER SHARE

 

52-WEEK RANGE:

₹6 – ₹19

 

MARKET CAPITALISATION:

₹ 56,000 CRORE

 

PROMOTER HOLDING:

36.8%

 

GOVERNMENT OF INDIA HOLDING:

26% (VIA EQUITY CONVERSION OF SPECTRUM DUES)

ARPU (AVERAGE REVENUE PER USER):

₹155 IN FY26, UP FROM ₹129 IN FY25 (20% GROWTH)

 

STRATEGIC INFLUENCE OF BIRLA’S APPOINTMENT

1. FUNDRAISING & CAPITAL INFUSION

·       Birla’s credibility as Chairman of the Aditya Birla Group strengthens investor confidence.

·       Likely to spearhead negotiations with banks, global funds, and strategic partners for fresh equity or debt infusion.

·       His presence signals promoter commitment, which is critical for attracting long-term capital.

PARTNERSHIPS & ALLIANCES

·       Birla may push for collaborations in 5G infrastructure, enterprise solutions, and digital services.

·       Potential tie-ups with global tech firms (cloud, IoT, AI) to diversify revenue beyond consumer mobility.

·       Could explore tower-sharing or fiber partnerships to reduce capex burden.

MARKET POSITIONING

·       Birla’s leadership may help reposition Vi as a “value-driven challenger” brand.

·       Emphasis on customer retention, digital-first services, and enterprise-grade reliability.

·       Strategic narrative: Vi as the third strong pillar in India’s telecom ecosystem.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

In summary, Vodafone Idea’s financial position in 2026 is fragile but improving. Kumar Mangalam Birla’s appointment as Non-Executive Chairman signals stronger promoter involvement, which—combined with government backing and 5G rollout—could be pivotal in shaping Vi’s turnaround.

Birla’s return as Chairman is more than symbolic—it’s a signal of promoter re-engagement at a time when Vodafone Idea needs credibility, capital, and strategic clarity. His leadership could be the turning point that determines whether Vi stabilizes and grows, or continues to struggle against Jio and Airtel.

 

#YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,