Are legal hassles holding back PE funds in India?
Published on Sat, May 17 at 11:46 , Updated at Sat, May 17 at 14:03
Source : CNBC-TV18
| ads by google |
By Menaka Doshi and Isha Dalal, CNBC-TV18:
The big deal is that many more private equity investors would have come to India and invested bigger bulks, if only we got the rules right.
India’s largest law firm Amarchand Mangaldas counts many leading private equity firms amongst its clients. The last few years have been M&A boom time and firm leader Cyril Shorff has no reason to complain. But the expert lawyer in him points out that private equity deals need more favourable regulations to truly thrive.
Cyril Shroff, Managing Partner, Amarchand Mangaldas says, "You cannot treat purely financial investors on the same bases as you would treat strategic investors as there is a conceptual flaw there." Rajiv Sahney, NV Advisory Services says, "The issue right now is not that I think that private equity is being penalized but it is much more that private equity’s needs are not really being addressed." Avnish Bajaj, Matrix Capital Partners adds, "Overall our business model works if we are able to maximise our profits and cut our losses. Maximisation of profits is not as much of an issue in India because if you list, the company is doing well, there is no issue. But there are a lot of laws which make it difficult for us to cut our losses." So what are the key issues holding back private equity funds?
The first one is Governance Rights - private equity investors hope to have a say in a company’s fundamental issues. For example, amendments to the company’s articles of association. A fresh issue of shares, a change in the company’s business activities or dissolution or winding up of the company.
Bajaj says, "We want to be able to influence the course of some of the decisions but it is not legally a right we have." And that’s because the takeover code interrupts such governance or veto rights as control and that could force the investor to make an open offer. Shroff elaborates - "Control is not defined very precisely, it is a very broad definition. It is not merely positive control as in 51% but it also includes negative control and the interpretation is that even the negative control in the form of board seat accompanied by veto rights, would constitute negative control." Sahney says, "The government needs to be very clear as to what role they are seeing private equity play. Are they seeing it as being a part of the promoter group or are they seeing it as an investment objective. If they seeing it as an investment objective, there needs great clarity as to what an investor’s rights are and those should not be clubbed with promoter’s rights." But that’s not all. Now there is new problem - share reclassification. Shares and convertible debentures are a standard issue but private equity firms prefer investing via optionally convertible preference shares. This even though Optionally Convertible Preference Shares India offer limited dividends, no voting power and have a 18 month time limit for conversion. Bajaj says, "It is an instrument that has been popularized worldwide because it gives the right level of risk-reward. You are able to pull your money out at face value, which is why it looks a little bit like debt or if the company is doing well, one can ride the upside on the equity. It is really a negotiation between the company or the promoters and the investor, so I am not so sure why the regulatory aspect has to come in there." Dalal adds, "But since May 2007, optionally convertible preference shares happened classified as debt which means that any PE investment through them has to conform with the ECB norms and get RBI approval. So is there a way out? Yes, the compulsory convertible shares with voting on an as-if converted basis. Except that these shares may require FIPB approval." Vishal Gandhi says, "The funds that we have been working with prefer to use instruments that can allow them to invest under the automatic route, which typically - government approvals - take time and therefore they want to use instruments that can quickly close the transaction. So what they do is they subscribe to a mix of equity and preference shares. They would subscribe to one equity share with disproportionate voting rights and then they would subscribe to preference shares so that they are protected are protected in terms of preferential dividends and preferential liquidation in preferences and all of that. That is what they have been doing. But there are risks attached to that." |
Messages on Business Talk
Other comments
Airtel and Vodafone to stock iPhone 3G
The iPhone 3G is all set to hit the Indian markets very soon. Airtel and Vodafone will officially stock the iPhone ...
in Business Talk - MMB Messenger at 21-Aug-08 07:21
RIL-RNRL case hearing delay may hit RIL
I dont think so. Sajeeet is the boss now. As you say dude. Ohh its kid\\\\`s day out. Mwhahahaaa....
in Business Talk - Guest at 21-Aug-08 03:40
Rate this article
Latest Market Commentary
21-08 Mkts ends in deep red; Bank, Realty down 5%
20-08 Mkts end strong as CG, metal, telecom, realty stks gain
Udayan's Comments
16-08 Global cues, crude prices hold key to mkt moves
14-08 Crude prices to set mkt course ahead
F&O Markets
21-08 Ispat sheds about 29.9 lakh shares in OI
20-08 FIIs net sell Rs 1,188.3 cr in Nifty Futures
Market Interview Transcripts
21-08 Weak macro situation weighing down on mkts
20-08 The Structured Products Case
CNBC TV18 Research Reports
21-08 Weak macro situation weighing down on mkts
21-08 IGI Airport gets India’s first Category III B runway
Brokerage Reports
Chat
Prakash Gaba
Technical Analyst ,
(22 Aug- 15:30hrs)
How to be an effective trader?
Poll
Newsletter
Keep in touch with News day & night. Subscribe to:
Mobile Services
Get news on the move SMS to 52622
- SMS M for Market News
- SMS B for Latest Business News
- SMS S (stock name) for latest news


Offline
World over, private equity investments are treated differently from strategic investments. Rules are framed especially for such financial investors but that’s not the case in India. There has been flood of PE deals these past 3-4 years. From deals worth almost USD 8 billion dollars in 2006 to USD 19 billion of deals last year and about USD 4 billion already done this year.
Cyril Shroff, Managing Partner, Amarchand Mangaldas, Rajiv Sahney, NV Advisory Services and Avnish Bajaj, Matrix Capital Partners spoke to CNBC-TV18 in an exclusive interview. One of the prime issues of concern is of Governance Rights - private equity investors hope to have a say in a company’s fundamental issues. 



