Corporate lawyers and investment bankers involved in cross-border merger and acquisition (M&A) deals say lack of uniformity in the definition of control in Indian regulations make foreign investors wary. It also flags issues around corporate governance practices at the board level, say proxy advisory firms.
Under Indian law, broadly speaking, ‘control’ emanates from ownership of a majority of the voting shares in a company. However, the Foreign Exchange Management Act, which governs FDI-related M&A deals, and the Companies Act, 1956, do not provide a specific definition of the term.
The Companies Act treats ownership of majority stake and ability to control the composition of the board of directors as giving rise to control. The new companies Bill takes a broader view, more in line with the takeover regulations of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi).
According to Arindam Ghosh, partner, Khaitan & Co, a Mumbai-based law firm, certain Sebi regulations define the term in a very narrow sense, to mean at least 51 per cent direct or indirect voting rights.
On the other hand, certain regulations adopt the much broader definition provided in the takeover code. Sebi’s takeover regulations recognise a situation where a minority business partner could have control by acting in concert with other shareholders or the management.
Sebi’s Takeover Regulations Advisory Committee said the issue should be seen on a case-by-case basis. It said the definition of control should be modified to include ‘ability’ in addition to the ‘right’ to appoint a majority of the directors or to control the management or policy decisions.
The issue of ‘positive’ (i.e. ability to push through or initiate certain actions) and ‘negative’ (i.e right to hold back a company from carrying out certain decisions) controls an investor enjoys has been the subject matter of many legal disputes.
Reading between the lines
“Control has always been a contentious issue and subject to Sebi’s discretion and assessment,” says Abhishek Pandey, vice-president, Resurgent India Ltd, an M&A advisory firm. The issue of negative control remains a grey area, not addressed fully by the takeover code, he adds.
According to Falguni Shah, partner, M&A Tax, KPMG India, the definition under the takeover code goes beyond prima facie control through ownership and composition of the board of directors.
What it essentially means is that even if a stakeholder does not have the ability to appoint a majority of the directors, rights such as appointment of a chief executive or positive control on certain functions might put the stakeholder in “control”
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