Background
A recent amendment to the SEBI LODR Regulations 2015 requires that Chairperson of a listed company shall not be an executive director or related to the Managing Director/CEO. This applies to top 500 listed companies in terms of market capitalisation. Such companies will have to ensure the change is made not later than 31st March 2020.
This change looks good on paper as in principle, it is wrong to concentrate power in one person / family in large quoted companies in India. However, I submit that this particular requirement does not make sense in Indian context as many large companies are family controlled. It will disrupt board structure of such companies and is actually counter productive. It could also harm the company’s business and public image.
While the genesis of this can be traced back to norms of corporate governance in the West, the immediate trigger for this amendment is a recommendation of the Kotak Committee’s report on corporate governance released in October 2017. The Companies Act, 2013, has certain provisions governing this, but they are not as restrictive and absolute as these new provisions under the SEBI Regulations. Let us thus review the provisions under Companies Act, 2013, what the Kotak Committee has recommended and finally what are the new provisions and their implications.
Provisions regarding split of post of Chairman/CEO under the Companies Act, 2013
Section 203 of the Act, which applies to certain specified companies, provides certain restrictions on appointing a Chairperson who is also the MD/CEO. The proviso to this section, which contains this provision, reads as under:
“Provided that an individual shall not be appointed or reappointed as the chairperson of the company, in pursuance of the articles of the company, as well as the managing director or Chief Executive Officer of the company at the same time after the date of commencement of this Act unless,—?
(a) the articles of such a company provide otherwise; or?
(b) the company does not carry multiple businesses:?
Provided further that nothing contained in the first proviso shall apply to such class of companies engaged in multiple businesses and which has appointed one or more Chief Executive Officers for each such business as may be notified by the Central Government.”
However, as can be seen, this restriction is not absolute. A company, can, for example, provide a relaxation in its articles permitting such a dual post.
Kotak Committee on corporate governance
The Kotak Committee has recommended several changes in the provisions relating to corporate governance.
The Committee gives elaborate reasons why the post of Chairman and CEO should be segregated. Referring to a global trend on this, the report talks of the advantages of this in the following words:
“The separation of powers of the chairperson (i.e. the leader of the board) and CEO/MD (i.e. the leader of the management) is seen to provide a better and more balanced governance structure by enabling better and more effective supervision of the management, by virtue of:
a) providing a structural advantage for the board to act independently;
b) reducing excessive concentration of authority in a single individual;
c) clarifying the respective roles of the chairperson and the CEO/MD;
d) ensuring that board tasks are not neglected by a combined chairperson-CEO/MD due to lack of time;
e) increasing the possibility that the chairperson and CEO/MD posts will be assumed by individuals possessing the skills and experience appropriate for those positions;
f) creating a board environment that is more egalitarian and conducive to debate. “
The Report of the Cadbury Committee is also quoted where it was stated, “…given the importance and the particular nature of the chairmen’s role, it should in principle be separate from that of the chief executive. If the two roles are combined in one person, it represents a considerable concentration of power”.
However, no comparative study has been made in the Indian context. It is presumed that what is good for the West, is best for the rest!
The Report, however, provides for a phased out implementation of this recommendation.
Amendments to the SEBI LODR Regulations 2015
SEBI has, after due consideration, amended the Regulations by inserting clause (1B) to Regulation 17. This new clause reads as under:
“(1B) With effect from April 1, 2020, the top 500 listed entities shall ensure that the Chairperson of the board of such listed entity shall—
(a) be a non-executive director;
(b) not be related to the Managing Director or the Chief Executive Officer as per the definition of the term “relative” defined under the Companies Act, 2013:
Provided that this sub-regulation shall not be applicable to the listed entities which do not have any identifiable promoters as per the shareholding pattern filed with stock exchanges.
Explanation.—The top 500 entities shall be determined on the basis of market capitalisation, as at the end of the immediate previous financial year.”
As can be seen, the new provision goes beyond the recommendation of the Kotak Committee and it is now an absolute requirement that this post should be segregated, and the chairperson should not be related to the Managing Director/CEO.
Implications of new provision
The Chairman should not be an executive director, nor should he be related to the Managing Director or CEO. Effectively, this means that the Chairperson and the MD/CEO will not be from the same family. Thus, for example, it would not be possible, for the father to be the Chairman and the son to be the Managing Director. This will have implications for Indian companies which are basically family controlled and / or family managed.
Do these new provisions make sense for India?
The significant feature of companies in the West is that the shareholding is widely held and the CEO is a professional manager. Persons in control including the Board members normally have insignificant holding even if their holdings are taken together. A widely held shareholding could make it difficult for shareholders to get together and exercise close control over the management. Thus, it matters how the Board of Directors is structured. In such a situation for the more the checks and balances, the better it is, for corporate functioning. Having the same person as chairperson and CEO does result in concentration of power considering that, as chairperson – CEO controls operations and influences. The issue is: Does this provision have any relevance in Indian conditions? The answer, it is submitted, is in the negative as most of large listed companies in India are controlled by `promoter family’. The family normally has significant holding and hence full operational control. The public shareholders know it and even prefer it. Usually, it is the head of the promoter group (typically, the family patriarch) who is the chairperson and thus the face of the group. For example, the Bajaj group has Mr. Rahul Bajaj as the chairperson and Reliance group has Mr. Mukesh Ambani. However, in India, the chairperson is also the CEO. This really helps in giving a realistic picture of who is / or are the persons in control of the company. Again, if the company is a first generation promoter company, the chairperson and managing director is often the Founder – thus segregating the posts of chairperson and managing director does not make sense in India. Further the restriction that the relative of the managing director cannot be chairperson is not relevant in view of fact that the Promoter Group exerts control over the company. Moreover the family members of the Promoter Group usually make up a significant part of the Board. The financial institutions at times prefer this as they seek personal guarantees of the promoters.
Hence, the principle that there should not be concentration of power in the promoter family goes against the culture, tradition and reality in India of how companies are founded and have been governed over generations, for example, Birlas, Goenkas and many others. What is needed in India is ensuring checks and balances over unbridled control by the promoter group.
Strangely, though, the new requirement does not apply to companies who do not have identifiable promoters. I feel in companies which have no identifiable promoter the management should stand split between the chairperson and the CEO. Further the provision should be in consonance with section 203 of the Companies Act. It would be relevant to have a chairperson who is not a relative of the CEO or the executive directors who are actively managing the company.
Does the Chairman really have any substantial powers under law in India?
Thus the real question then is whether the chairperson who is not a relative will have any real power in the corporate setup in India. The answer, I submit, is in the negative. Further the Companies Act, 2013, and the SEBI Regulations that govern 500 top companies do not give any real power to the chairperson. Normally a chairperson cannot and does not take any significant/substantive decision.
The chairperson has limited administrative powers of, say, chairing and conducting meetings, signing minutes book, etc. Address the shareholders’ meeting. Even in family companies if the chairperson is a patriarch he is a guide and has a balancing influence. Even the casting vote, whereby he can break a deadlock, is rarely used.
In contrast, in public perception, the chairperson is the corporate brand ambassador of the company. It makes sense if the chairperson is from the founder/and or lead promoter group who actually run, control and manage the operations. Insisting that the chairperson should neither be the CEO, nor related to him, will result in making a chairperson who has no real say in the company.
This would not make any difference in corporate governance. Hence, the Kotak Committee rightly stops at recommending that the post of CEO and chairperson should be split.
Conclusion
It is surprising that the corporate circle has not reacted. However, it will not be surprising that these provisions will be complied merely in letter, (box ticking), without any substantive benefit.