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Some investors target NSE in rare backlash

Updated - October 18, 2016 02:15 pm IST

Published - May 20, 2016 11:08 pm IST - MUMBAI:

The foreign funds want the top bourse to expedite its listing so that they can exit and pay back their investors.

In equities, the NSE had average daily volumes of Rs.17,190 crore ($2.56 billion) in April.

Some foreign investors are accusing India’s National Stock Exchange (NSE) of dragging its feet on an initial public offering, saying management is ignoring them and purging their views from minutes of meetings, letters and emails seen by Reuters showed.

Five investors, who together own 10.1 percent of India’s biggest exchange by trading volumes, said “shareholder interest and corporate governance norms have been blatantly disregarded” as a result, according to a March 7 letter sent to the bourse and seen by Reuters, which has previously not been reported.

“The NSE is a model of poor corporate governance,” said Sohil Chand, a managing director at U.S. firm Norwest Venture Partners, one of the foreign funds that signed the letter, in an interview. “There is zero transparency and there’s zero accountability.”

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An NSE spokesman rejected the accusations but declined to discuss individual letters. “We do not want to respond to those misplaced concerns and motivated campaigns,” the spokesman said in an email. The investor letters and emails mark an escalation in a months-long battle between the exchange and these investors over a potential listing of the NSE.

The funds, some of which have invested in the NSE for almost a decade, want the exchange to list as soon as possible so that they can exit and pay back investors in their funds.

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Company reluctant

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But the company has been reluctant because Indian law requires it to list on another exchange rather than on itself, which would expose it to being regulated by a rival bourse.

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The NSE has said it is lobbying regulators for permission to self-list or be regulated by the country’s securities regulator. The fight is the latest sign that shareholder activism, though still rare, is beginning to gain traction in India, where companies face few challenges from investors and governance problems are common.

Most recently, Children’s Investment Fund waged a two-year battle against Coal India and the government over accusations of mismanagement, which ended after the British-based hedge fund exited from its investment in 2014. That increased activism is visible more broadly across Asia, as investors seek better returns amid ultra-low interest rates and sluggish global growth.

‘Not dragging feet’ In the case of NSE, the funds leading the campaign are all foreign institutional investors who invested in the market by buying stakes from earlier domestic institutional investors.

Other funds that signed the March 7 letter consist of a group of private equity and venture capital firms, most of which have funds based in Mauritius: Beacon India, GTI Capital, DVI and SAIF Partners.An NSE board member who stepped down this year denied the investors’ accusations and said the company had genuine concerns about listing on a separate exchange.

He said there had been a lot of misinformation regarding the NSE’s stance. “Some shareholders are getting very impatient. They think we are dragging our feet, which is not correct,” he told Reuters on conditions of anonymity. Further rankling the NSE investors, BSE has said it will file a prospectus for an IPO within six to nine months as it aims to list by next year, probably on the NSE.

Tensions between the NSE and the five investors go back to at least the middle of last year, but the acrimony has intensified this year. In February, the NSE sent minutes from a meeting to its shareholders, saying “all shareholders welcomed” developments such as the creation of a listing committee, according to a copy of the minutes.

It also said there were “no conceptual issues against” a planned restructuring that would create a separate holding company to oversee operations.

The minutes prompted an angry response from the investors. In the March 7 letter, they said the minutes “misrepresent the true proceedings and discussions”.

SAIF Managing Partner Ravi Adusumalli said his fund was ready to call for a replacement of management if the exchange does not push for an IPO this year.

“We have been extremely reasonable for years now and have tried to work with management,” said Mr.Adusumalli. “But we have run out of patience.”

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