Indian takeover regulation – under reformed and over modified
Published By: IIM-A on eSS | Published Date: November, 14 , 2009The takeover of substantial number of shares, voting rights or control in a listed Indian
company attracts the provision of SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers)
Regulations 1997. The regulations have been amended nearly 20 times since inception, though
the amendments have mainly concentrated on areas which needed no amendment. At the same
time a vast number of obvious problems have not been rectified in the regulations. The large
number of amendments have also created requirement of a compulsory tender offer of such
unnecessary complexity as to make it virtually unintelligible to even a well qualified
professional.
This paper argues that the complexity in the trigger points for disclosure and tender offer
introduced over the years lacks a philosophy, and most of the amendments can not only be
deleted but a very simple structure can be introduced making compliance of the regulations
straight forward and easy to understand by management of listed companies. Certain other
areas which need amendments have also been discussed. Chief amongst these are the
provisions relating to consolidation of holdings, conditional tender offers, hostility to hostile
acquisitions, definitional oddities, payment of control premium in the guise of non compete
fees, treatment of differential voting rights, treatment of Global Depository Receipts and
disclosure enhancements.
This paper does not try to portray a particular combination of numbers as the best possible set
of trigger points and compulsory acquisition numbers but advocates that whatever numbers
are adopted should not be changed for several decades. Arguments that state that the
changing economic condition requires constant changes with these numbers, it is argued is
wrong. [W.P. No. 2009-11-06]
Author(s): Sandeep Parekh | Posted on: Jul 14, 2010 | Views(940) | Download (1189)