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Thursday, July 2, 2026

NOW ANNUAL POSH AUDITS IS MANDATORY FOR ALL WORKPLACES IN INDIA EMPLOYING 10 OR MORE PEOPLE.

 NOW ANNUAL POSH AUDITS IS MANDATORY FOR ALL WORKPLACES IN INDIA EMPLOYING 10 OR MORE PEOPLE.

NOW POSH AUDIT IS MANDATORY

As of June 19, 2026, the National Commission for Women (NCW) has made annual POSH audits mandatory for all workplaces in India employing 10 or more people. Non-compliance will now be treated as a violation of the POSH Act, 2013.

AUDIT SCOPE:

·       Functioning of Internal Committees (ICs)

·       Complaint handling and confidentiality safeguards

·       Awareness and training initiatives

·       Workplace safety infrastructure

·       Mandatory disclosures and use of the SHe-Box platform

THE AUDIT SHALL ASSESS:

- Constitution and legal compliance of the Internal Committee (IC)

- Appointment of a female Presiding Officer

- Functioning of the IC

- Number, status and timely disposal of complaints

- Confidentiality safeguards

- Training and awareness programs

- Display of mandatory disclosures

- Workplace safety and infrastructure

 - She-Box registration and updation.

COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR ORGANIZATIONS

REQUIREMENT

DETAILS

INTERNAL COMMITTEE

Must exist in every workplace with 10+ employees; minimum 50% women representation required.

ANNUAL AUDIT

Mandatory; covers compliance, complaints, awareness, and infrastructure.

MONITORING CELLS

States/UTs to set up POSH Monitoring Cells or digital dashboards.

DISTRICT OVERSIGHT

District Officers to track compliance and awareness locally.

TRAINING

Specialized training for IC members and awareness programs for employees.

 

TO WHOM THE AUDIT REPORT WILL BE SUBMITTED

The Audit report shall be submitted to:

- District Officer

- District Magistrate/ Deputy Commissioner

- Concerned Administrative Department

NON-COMPLIANCE

Failure to conduct the POSH Audit shall be treated as non-compliance

REPUTATIONAL DAMAGE:

 Organizations risk public scrutiny and loss of trust.

OPERATIONAL PENALTIES:

Possible fines, stricter monitoring, and escalation to higher authorities.

ACTION STEPS RECOMMENDED FOR EMPLOYERS

·       Schedule Annual POSH Audit immediately for FY 2026–27.

·       Review Internal Committee composition — ensure 50% women representation.

·       Document and disclose compliance via audit reports to district authorities.

·       Conduct awareness sessions for employees and training for IC members.

·       Integrate SHe-Box platform into grievance redressal mechanisms.

SUMMARY

The NCW’s move signals the end of “paper compliance” — organizations can no longer rely on having a POSH policy without active implementation. This is a nationwide accountability push to ensure workplaces are genuinely safe, inclusive, and respectful for women.

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

Monday, June 29, 2026

A MAJOR CSR REFORMS FOR COMPANIES EXEMPTING FROM CSR IMPACT ASSESSMENT COMPANIES CAN NOW DEPLOY THEIR CSR (CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY) FUNDS BY SUBSCRIBING TO ZERO COUPON ZERO PRINCIPAL (ZCZP) INSTRUMENTS.

 A MAJOR CSR REFORMS FOR COMPANIES EXEMPTING FROM CSR IMPACT ASSESSMENT

COMPANIES CAN NOW DEPLOY THEIR CSR (CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY) FUNDS BY SUBSCRIBING TO ZERO COUPON ZERO PRINCIPAL (ZCZP) INSTRUMENTS.


The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has notified the Companies (Corporate Social Responsibility Policy) Amendment Rules, 2026 vide G.S.R. 415(E) dated 27th May, 2026.

                            BACKGROUND & CONTEXT:

India's Social Stock Exchange was conceptualised by SEBI's Ishaat Hussain Committee (2019) and became operational from 2023. The ZCZP instrument is a unique, debt-like vehicle where the issuing NFO neither pays interest nor repays principal — the "return" is social impact. This amendment formally integrates SSE-listed NFOs into the mainstream CSR ecosystem under the Companies Act, 2013, creating a regulated channel for impact-linked CSR deployment.

WHAT'S NEW?

Two new definitions have been inserted in Rule 2(1) of the CSR Policy Rules, 2014:

"NOT FOR PROFIT ORGANIZATION (NFO)" — aligned with SEBI (ICDR) Regulations, 2018 (Regulation 292A(e)), meaning entities listed on the Social Stock Exchange (SSE) segment.

"ZERO COUPON ZERO PRINCIPAL (ZCZP) INSTRUMENT" — a security issued by an SSE-listed NFO, declared as such by SEBI.

·       Companies may now deploy CSR funds by subscribing to ZCZP instruments — subject to a cap of 10% of their total CSR spend for that financial year.

·        Companies subscribing via ZCZP route are exempt from CSR impact assessment for those projects — a significant compliance relief.

THE NFO ISSUING THE ZCZP INSTRUMENT MUST:

• Complete the funded project within 3 succeeding financial years from date of issue.

• Transfer any unspent amounts to a Schedule VII fund and file compliance report with SEBI upon de-listing.

·                   All other provisions of Rule 4 (except sub-rules 5 & 6) apply to ZCZP-funded CSR activities.

WHY THIS MATTERS ?

FLEXIBILITY FOR COMPANIES:

Firms now have an additional structured avenue to fulfill CSR obligations.

TRANSPARENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY:

 ZCZP instruments create a formal mechanism for tracking CSR spending.

BOOST FOR NGOS & SOCIAL ENTERPRISES:

Access to CSR funds becomes easier and more predictable.

FOR CSS AND CFOS:

To review your board-approved CSR policy and annual CSR plan to evaluate eligibility for this route.

FOR CAS:

 The 10% cap and impact assessment exemption require disclosure treatment in CSR annual reports.

For CS:

To ensure client CSR committee minutes and contracts with implementing agencies are updated to reflect this route, if adopted.

SUMMING UP

Previously, CSR spending was limited to direct project funding, contributions to specified funds, or partnerships with implementing agencies. With this amendment, the government is encouraging financial innovation in CSR deployment, aligning corporate contributions with measurable social outcomes.

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

Sunday, June 28, 2026

HDFC BANK LEGAL REVIEW FINDS NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT FORMER CHAIRMAN & INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR ATANU CHAKRABORTY'S ALLEGATIONS AGAINST HDFC BANK

HDFC BANK LEGAL REVIEW FINDS NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT FORMER CHAIRMAN & INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR   ATANU CHAKRABORTY'S ALLEGATIONS AGAINST HDFC BANK

CAN ATANU CHAKRABORTY CAN BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR A SHARP FALL IN HDFC BANK’S MARKET CAPITALIZATION—NEARLY 14% (≈$16 BILLION)


FACTS OF THE CASE

RESIGNATION:

Chakraborty abruptly stepped down in March 2026, citing “ethical concerns.”

MARKET IMPACT:

His exit triggered a sharp fall in HDFC Bank’s market capitalization—nearly 14% (≈$16 billion) in the following weeks.

REGULATORY RESPONSE:

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued reassurances to investors and depositors about the bank’s governance and financial health.

SPECIFIC ISSUE MENTIONED:

Chakraborty had alluded to the “Dubai matter,” involving alleged mis-selling of Additional Tier-1 bonds. The review found no evidence that he raised objections during his tenure.

KEY FINDINGS FROM THE REVIEW

LAW FIRMS INVOLVED:

Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati (international) and Wadia Ghandy & Co. (India).

SCOPE:

Covered two years preceding Chakraborty’s resignation (March 2026).

EVIDENCE EXAMINED:

 

·       Board and committee meeting minutes

·       Agenda papers and internal communications

·       Emails and governance records

·       Interviews with independent directors, committee chairpersons, CEO Sashidhar Jagdishan, and senior management.

OUTCOME OF INVESTIGATION

HDFC Bank’s independent legal review has concluded that there is no evidence to support the allegations made by former chairman Atanu Chakraborty in his March 2026 resignation letter.

The review, conducted by international and Indian law firms, found no governance lapses or ethical concerns substantiated in board records or witness interviews.

·       No contemporaneous evidence of dissent or ethical concerns raised by Chakraborty.

·       Witness interviews did not corroborate his claims.

·       Meeting minutes showed he had opportunities to record objections but did not do so.

NON-PARTICIPATION BY CHAKRABORTY IN THE INVESTIGATION

Despite repeated requests, Atanu Chakraborty did not participate in interviews. This leaves some questions about his perspective unresolved.

MARKET SENSITIVITY:

Even unsubstantiated allegations can cause significant volatility, highlighting the importance of transparent governance communication.

CAN ATANU CHAKRABORTY CAN BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR A SHARP FALL IN HDFC BANK’S MARKET CAPITALIZATION—NEARLY 14% (≈$16 BILLION)?

Legally and financially, holding Atanu Chakraborty personally accountable for HDFC Bank’s 14% market cap decline (≈$16 billion) is highly unlikely.

FREEDOM OF SPEECH IN RESIGNATION LETTERS:

A chairman can raise concerns, but unless proven malicious or fraudulent, he is protected as part of governance discourse.

BURDEN OF PROOF:

To hold him liable, regulators or shareholders would need to prove that his statements were knowingly false, reckless, and intended to cause harm.

PRECEDENT:

In India and globally, corporate leaders are rarely held personally responsible for market volatility triggered by their departure or statements, unless linked to fraud or insider trading.

 

POSSIBLE AVENUES OF ACCOUNTABILITY

Shareholder lawsuits:

In theory, minority shareholders could attempt to sue for damages, but success would require proving deliberate misrepresentation.

Regulatory censure:

The RBI or SEBI could investigate if they believed his actions destabilized the market. However, with the legal review clearing the bank, such action is improbable.

Reputational impact:

While not legally liable, Chakraborty’s credibility in corporate governance circles may be affected.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

Chakraborty is unlikely to face legal or financial accountability for the $16 billion market cap loss. The decline was a consequence of investor sentiment and uncertainty, not demonstrable misconduct. His non-participation in the review leaves questions unanswered, but without proof of malice, liability doesn’t attach.

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

Friday, June 26, 2026

WHETHER ORDINARY RESOLUTION PASSED WITH 51% BY A PARENT COMPANY WITH 20% OF HOLDING COMPANY SHARES TO APPROVE A RELATED PARTY TRANSACTION IS VALID ONE? DOES SECTION 188 OF COMPANIES ACT 2013 AND REGULATION 23(4) OF SEBI LODR HAS A LOOPHOLE?

 WHETHER ORDINARY RESOLUTION PASSED WITH 51% BY A PARENT COMPANY WITH 20% OF HOLDING COMPANY SHARES TO APPROVE A RELATED PARTY TRANSACTION IS VALID ONE?

DOES SECTION 188 OF COMPANIES ACT 2013 AND REGULATION 23(4) OF SEBI LODR HAS A LOOPHOLE?


FACTS OF THE CASE

Imagine a listed company — for example, Tata Steel Limited — places a resolution before its shareholders in the General Meeting to approve the termination of a construction contract entered into with Tata Sons Private Limited (its Promoter Group entity and Related Party).

The company secures the Ordinary Resolution with 51% votes in favour. However, out of this, Tata Sons (holding 20%) also voted in favour of the termination.

IS THIS ORDINARY RESOLUTION VALID?

Does Section 188 of Companies Act 2013 and Regulation 23(4) of SEBI LODR has a loophole?

This question  dives right into the intersection of Companies Act, 2013 (Section 188) and SEBI LODR Regulations (Regulation 23), both of which govern related party transactions (RPTs).

KEY LEGAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 188(1), COMPANIES ACT, 2013:

Certain related party transactions require Board approval and, in some cases, shareholder approval.

SECOND PROVISO TO SECTION 188(1):

If shareholder approval is required, related parties cannot vote to approve the resolution.

REGULATION 23(4), SEBI LODR:

 For listed companies, all material related party transactions must be approved by shareholders, and all related parties are prohibited from voting to approve such resolutions, regardless of whether they are interested in that transaction.

HOW IT APPLIES?

·       Tata Steel Limited is a listed company.

·       The resolution concerns termination of a contract with Tata Sons Pvt Ltd, a promoter group entity and related party.

·       Tata Sons holds 20% shares and voted in favour.

·       The resolution passed with 51% votes in favour, but this includes Tata Sons’ 20%.

·       Problem: Since Tata Sons is a related party, its votes must be excluded when calculating whether the resolution has passed.

·       Excluding Tata Sons’ 20%, the effective votes in favour are only 31%.

·       That means the resolution fails, because it does not secure a majority of the non-related party shareholders.

IS THERE A LOOPHOLE?

Not really. Both Section 188 and Regulation 23(4) are clear: related parties cannot vote to approve their own transactions. SEBI has tightened this further by requiring exclusion of related party votes even if they are not directly interested.

So, in this scenario:

·       The resolution is invalid because Tata Sons’ votes should not have been counted.

·       There is no loophole — the law anticipates this exact situation and prevents promoter group entities from pushing through RPT approvals with their own votes.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

The ordinary resolution passed with 51% including Tata Sons’ votes is not valid. For compliance, Tata Steel must re-run the resolution and secure majority approval excluding Tata Sons’ 20% stake.

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

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

ARE THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS PROTECT THE MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS INTEREST IN INDIA? PROTECTION OF MINORITY SHAREHOLDER’S INTEREST BY INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR IS A MYTH OR REALITY?

 ARE THE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS PROTECT THE MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS INTEREST IN INDIA?

PROTECTION OF MINORITY SHARE

 HOLDER’S INTEREST BY

 INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR IS A MYTH OR

 REALITY?


The Companies Act, 2013 and SEBI’s Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR) Regulations give them explicit responsibilities to safeguard minority investors, especially in promoter-controlled companies where conflicts of interest are common.

Schedule IV outlines their Code of Conduct, including duties to act in the interest of all shareholders, especially minorities.

SEBI LODR REGULATIONS, 2015

·       IDs must oversee related party transactions (RPTs), which often involve promoter interests.

·       IDs chair or sit on key committees like the Audit Committee and Nomination & Remuneration Committee (NRC).

·       Regulation 25 requires IDs to meet separately at least once a year to evaluate board performance and independence.

INFORMATION ASYMMETRY:

IDs rely on management for data, which may be incomplete or biased.

CASES WHERE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS PROTECTED MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS

CASE LAW NAME

                      DETAILS

Tata–Cyrus Mistry Case (2016) 

Independent directors of Tata group companies, such as Nusli Wadia, openly supported Cyrus Mistry after his ouster as Chairman of Tata Sons. They raised concerns about governance practices and minority shareholder rights, showing IDs can act as a check on promoter dominance.

Infosys Whistleblower Allegations (2019)

Anonymous whistleblowers alleged that the CEO and CFO were engaging in unethical practices to inflate short-term profits. The company’s independent directors took the allegations seriously, hired independent law firms to conduct a thorough investigation, and demonstrated transparency to protect retail and institutional shareholders from sudden panic.

CASES WHERE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS FAILED TO PROTECT MINORITY INTERESTS

CASE LAW NAME

                      DETAILS

Satyam Computer Services (2009)

The independent directors on the audit committee—despite their highly distinguished professional backgrounds—failed to scrutinize the fake accounts and resigned shortly after the scam broke, drawing severe criticism for acting as passive "rubber stamps".

Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) (2018):

Despite a robustly constituted board, independent directors failed to flag massive related-party transactions and excessive debt leveraging. This led to a liquidity crisis that severely eroded minority shareholder and public investor wealth.

Manpasand Beverages (2019):

Following the resignation of their statutory auditors, independent directors on the audit committee approved financial results without sufficient due diligence. SEBI penalized the independent directors for failing to exercise proper oversight over financial reporting, proving that mere participation isn't enough to protect shareholders

Defeating Promoter Resolutions (2023): KRBL Ltd

Emboldened by proxy advisory firms and stricter corporate governance norms under the Companies Act, minority shareholders successfully banded together to vote down resolutions—such as disproportionate remuneration hikes for promoter families—at prominent companies (e.g., KRBL Ltd.). Independent oversight has empowered these proxy advisory systems.

Fortis Healthcare Case (2018)

Independent directors were criticized for not acting decisively against alleged diversion of funds by the promoters (Singh brothers). SEBI later intervened to protect minority shareholders, showing IDs had not fulfilled their duty effectively.

KEY TAKEAWAY

Independent directors in India do have a statutory duty to protect minority shareholders, especially through oversight of related party transactions, board independence, and transparency.

So, while the law in India clearly mandates independent directors to safeguard minority shareholders, real-world outcomes vary widely. In some cases, they’ve been strong protectors; in others, they’ve failed due to lack of independence or oversight.

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