Monday, December 27, 2010

: Amendments to the Equity Listing Agreement

In line with the objective of enhancing the quality of disclosures made by listed entities, it
has been decided to effect certain amendments to the Equity Listing Agreement (“the
LA”) with respect to various continuous disclosures made by listed entities.
2. The full text of amendments to be effected in the LA is given in the Annexure hereto. A
gist of the said amendments is as follows:-
(I) Amendments to Clause 35 – Disclosure relating to shareholding pattern
(a) Disclosure of shareholding pattern prior to listing of securities
Entities which seek listing of their securities post-IPO shall mandatorily submit their
shareholding pattern as per Clause 35 of the LA one day prior to the date of listing,
in order to ensure public dissemination of updated shareholding pattern. The stock
exchanges shall upload the same on their websites before commencement of
trading in the said securities.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Poor performance by A2Z Maintenance & Engineering Services IPO on listing

Poor performance by  A2Z Maintenance & Engineering Services IPO on listing 

Indian stock market "Warren Buffett " Rakesh Jhunjhunwala invested Company A2Z Maintenance & Engineering Services IPO down 18 percent on day of listing. company issued shares to public at Rs. 400 a share of which 4%(out of 21 percent) were offloaded by Rakesh. He invested in the company in 2006 at Rs 14 a share

Press Information Bureau English Releases

Press Information Bureau English Releases: "Corporate Governance

The National Foundation of Corporate Governance (NFCG) has been expanded so as to make its membership more broad based and to enable it to function as the national apex platform on corporate governance issues. In order to raise the bar of corporate governance practices in the Indian corporate sector, the Ministry had released Voluntary Guidelines on Corporate Governance in December last year which highlighted some of the issues related to independent directors, audit, compensation to directors etc. Keeping in view the adoption of these guidelines and the feedback from stakeholders, the Ministry is considering incorporation of some of the features in the Companies Bill itself"

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Good governance creates value | mydigitalfc.com

Good governance creates value | mydigitalfc.com: "It was two years ago, on a cold winter morning that India woke up to one of the most shocking revelations; in an open letter, the promoter of Satyam seemed to have confessed to one of corporate In­dia’s largest fraud. Two years later, investigations still continue but there seems to be no result and the saga continues. Satyam almost heralded the beginning of the scam saga of India as the past two years seem overcast with corruption and scandals of all kinds. All this has left us questioning the credibility of every single institution of India, including corporate India, the media and judiciary. Where this recent investigation will end is anybody’s guess. What is it that makes India so prone to corruption? There is no deterrent to corruption in India. The corrupt simply get away too easily."

Monday, December 13, 2010

The Big Idea: The Case for Professional Boards - Harvard Business Review

The Big Idea: The Case for Professional Boards - Harvard Business Review: "When the world’s largest financial institutions had to be rescued from insolvency in 2008 by massive injections of governmental assistance, many blamed corporate boards for a lack of oversight. This was a problem we had supposedly solved nearly a decade ago, when blatant failures of corporate governance (remember Enron?) prompted Congress to pass the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The new rules had seemed promising. The majority of a board’s directors had to be independent, which would, in theory, better protect shareholders. Senior executives were required to conduct annual assessments of their internal controls for review by external auditors, whose work would be further reviewed by a quasi-governmental oversight board.

The recent financial meltdown, however, has made it clear that the new rules were insufficient. Most major financial institutions in 2008 were more than compliant with SOX. Indeed, at the banks that collapsed, 80% of the board members were independent, as were all members of their audit, compensation, and nominating committees. All the firms had evaluated their internal controls yearly, and the 2007 reports from their external auditors showed no material weaknesses in those controls. But that didn’t stop the failures."

Sunday, December 12, 2010

SEBI tightens promoter norms - The Economic Times

SEBI tightens promoter norms - The Economic Times: "The capital markets regulator, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has made some significant changes in the capital market regulations. It has tightened the framework for preferential allotment of shares to promoters' groups to prevent misuse of preferential allotments, warrants, and convertibles to manipulate share prices.

If a promoter or a promoter group fails to exercise warrants they have previously subscribed to, equity shares, convertibles or warrants cannot be issued for one year from the date of expiry of the currency or cancellation of the warrants. The promoter and the promoter group are also ineligible for preferential allotment if it has sold shares in the previous six months. This has been a long-standing demand from investor protection groups."

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Poor Corporate Governance at Birla Power Solution Ltd.

Promoters sold shares in open market at high price and now buying through preferential warrant issue at lower price 


Birla Power Solutions Ltd. is issuing equity share warrants of around 21 crores  to its promoters on preferential basis at average one week market price (present market price is around Rupees 1.25) . with this promoters share holding in the company will go up to 12.76 percent (at present 4.04 percent )

As per Bombay stock exchange data  in march 2010 Promoter  share holding in the company was was at 10.02 percent and at the end of September  quarter 2010 they reduced it to 4.04 percent. in the month of march shares were quoting  at Rupees 3.50  and now present market price is at Rupees 1.25 
promoters have sold their stake at 3.50 and now they are making preferential allotment to them at around at rupee 1.25
Is this justifiable on part of promoters ? 
Is Security Exchange Board of India is watching ?

Monday, December 6, 2010

Corporate governance at stake at Hero Honda Motors

Corporate governance at stake
Is it right on the part of Hero Honda promoters (Munjals) to buy out 26 percent stake of Honda  in Hero Honda motors (JV) at more than 30 percent discount to market price and increasing royalty payment to Honda  for technology

Monday, October 25, 2010

Investment limit in initial public offer (IPO) for retail investors increased to rupees 2 lakh

Good News for Retail Investors

Securities and Exchange Board of India ncreased the investment limit in initial public offer (IPO) or follow-on offer (FPO) to Rs 2 lakh from current Rs 1 lakh.

Suspended animation of scrips: Investors suffer and errant companies are let off the hook - Moneylife: Personal Finance Magazine

Suspended animation of scrips: Investors suffer, and errant companies are let off the hook

Suspended animation of scrips: Investors suffer and errant companies are let off the hook - Moneylife: Personal Finance Magazine: "Suspended animation of scrips: Investors suffer, and errant companies are let off the hook"

Friday, October 15, 2010

Wanted: A Better Board of Directors -------Conference Speakers Argue Good Corporate Governance is Worth the Cost

Wanted: A Better Board of Directors

Conference Speakers Argue Good Corporate Governance is Worth the Cost

Oct. 15, 2010
How do we turn corporate boards of directors from lap dogs into guard dogs? 
The comparison may be humorous, but the challenges it represents are serious. When The School of Management’s Institute for Excellence in Corporate Governance (IECG) held its eighth annual national corporate governance conference Oct. 7, participants considered how to give corporate boards more bark, more bite and more effectiveness. 
Moderated by IECG Director of Special Projects and Development Dennis McCuistion, the daylong event, “Money Well Spent: How Effective Boards Create Value,” featured interactive discussions about boardroom practices that increase directors’ productivity and organizations’ performance. 
“Board members need to not only be qualified, but they need to stand up, they need to ask the right questions, and then they need to take action long before the problems happen.”
Dennis McCuistion,
IECG director of special projects and development
“Without good corporate governance at every level of every large corporation in America, mistakes will be made which will cost everybody else in America,” McCuistion said. “Board members need to not only be qualified, but they need to stand up, they need to ask the right questions, and then they need to take action long before the problems happen. Board members who are unqualified are a problem, but board members who will not take action when they know the right thing to do are even a bigger problem.” 
Opening speaker John Gillespie, co-author ofMoney for Nothing: How the Failure of Corporate Boards Is Ruining American Business and Costing Us Trillions (Free Press, 2010), highlighted some of the problems caused by ineffective board members while addressing the question: “What corporate governance changes are raising board effectiveness in the 21st century?” He discussed a variety of cases and the related lessons he learned while researching the book he recently published with co-author David Zweig. 
Gillespie offered several solutions for making boards more effective. He proposed splitting the chairman and CEO posts, allowing extraordinary general meetings to be called by shareholders, allowing real proxy access, creating a new class of professional full-time directors, getting training for board members, creating a $50 million consortium from a 0.01 percent fee on equity trades, opening the nominating process, getting better diversity within the boardroom and communicating with shareholders. 
“The most important ways to reform boards and have them do the jobs they’re suppose to do to grow shareholders’ investments,” Gillespie said, “are to have shareholders inform themselves and demand change and for directors to provide the checks and balances that they’re supposed to provide.” 
Panelists included board members, lobbyists, compensation consultants, experts on governance practice, attorneys and top-level executives. They discussed shareholder rights, CEO compensation, institutional investor practices and Washington’s impact on the nation’s economy. 
“Now, for the first time in the last 75 years, we do have an honest-to-goodness rival. China is focused like a laser beam on competitiveness. They’re obsessed with it.”
Steve Moore,
Wall Street Journal
editorial board member and senior economics writer
Luncheon speaker Steve Moore, Wall Street Journal editorial board member and senior economics writer, delivered a wide-ranging discussion “Washington, D.C., Politics and Economics in the Aftermath of Dodd-Frank,” the recently enacted Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. 
“To me the most important issue for our nation, going forward,” Moore said, “is this one: What country on this planet is going to be the global economic superpower? For all of our lives, there’s only been one economic superpower — the United States.” 
Moore explained that, at least since the end of World War II, the U.S. has set the pace in technology, has outgrown every other country and has created 60 million jobs. 
“Now, for the first time in the last 75 years, we do have an honest-to-goodness rival,” he said. “China is focused like a laser beam on competitiveness. They’re obsessed with it.”
Moore concluded by stating the problem in blunt terms. “That’s our central challenge — how do we make sure we remain competitive?” he asked. “We’ve been a force for good, not evil. I want our kids, not to be working for the Chinese, but the Chinese to be working for our kids.” 
Other speakers included Public Company Accounting Oversight Board member Charles D. Niemeier, who discussed regulatory structure changes, and James Millstein, chief restructuring officer of the U.S. Treasury Department and former managing director of Lazard Freres & Co. The two argued the pros and cons of the feasibility of instituting a new class of professional board directors. 
“This conference confirmed a lot of things that I already knew,” said conference attendee Sydney Smith Hicks, executive chairman of the board at DeviceFidelity Inc. “When I hear about the depth of the chaos in Washington, D.C., it’s depressing, frankly. But it makes me ground my view that I have to make plans around it. It’s not going to get better, or more stable. There’s no sense in making business plans holding out for better tax laws — you’re not going to get them.” 
Carl Mudd, IECG director in residence, characterized the speakers and presenters at the conference as “outstanding. I wanted to spend more time with each of them asking questions because they’re the people who are either making the decisions or are in the know.” 
“Corporate governance and the responsibilities of boards was the overriding theme of the conference,” Mudd said, “but in today’s environment, with congressional involvement, the rapid changes in laws, the various professional organizations having to respond prior to or subsequent to those laws being written, it has become much broader now than just the director level. It had all aspects of why we’re in the condition we’re in and what we have to do to get out of it.”

Monday, October 11, 2010

Corporate Governance at backstage at SKS Microfinance Ltd

SKS Microfinance Ltd., India's largest microfinance lender in terms of borrowers, ousted its chief executive Officer  Suresh Gurumani without any explanation within months of its IPO
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has  reacted quickly and publicly in asking the company to explain its action.
Mr. Gurumani—who had been in banking for more than 20 years with Barclays PLC and Standard Chartered Bank and others before coming to SKS in 2008.
SKS Microfinance expected to come clear on this issue to safeguard the interest of investors 

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Poor show by IPOs in Secondary market in October 2010

Poor show by IPOs in Secondary market 


Out of seven IPOs( initial public offers ) listed in October 2010 only 3 offers has given positive returns highest being Carrier point with 90 percent return and rest two produced only marginal 5 percent returns . four  offers have produced negative returns, major looser Trupati lnks down 45 percent and rest 3 are down on an average of 10 percent .

Thursday, October 7, 2010

SEBI asks Anjaniputra Ispat to divest IAG shares and take open offer route news

SEBI asks Anjaniputra Ispat to divest IAG shares and take open offer route news




The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has directed Anjaniputra Ispat Limited to divest 6,06,000 shares it acquired in IAG Company Limited on 19 December 2008 and on 3 April 2009 within thirty days.
In its order passed on 6 November 2010, the market regulator has asked Anjaniputra Ispat to appoint a merchant banker for transfer of the shares, including profit, if any, in selling those shares, to the Investor Protection Fund of the concerned stock exchanges.
SEBI has asked Anjaniputra Ispat Limited instead to continue with an open offer for 20 per cent in the issued and paid-up equity capital of IAG Company Limited (the target company) in terms of SEBI Takeover Regulations.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has directed Anjaniputra Ispat Limited to divest 6,06,000 shares it acquired in IAG Company Limited on 19 December 2008 and on 3 April 2009 within thirty days.
In its order passed on 6 October 2010, the market regulator has asked Anjaniputra Ispat to appoint a merchant banker for transfer of the shares, including profit, if any, in selling those shares, to the Investor Protection Fund of the concerned stock exchanges.
SEBI has asked Anjaniputra Ispat Limited instead to continue with an open offer for 20 per cent in the issued and paid-up equity capital of IAG Company Limited (the target company) in terms of SEBI Takeover Regulations.
In its order passed on 6 October 2010, SEBI has warned the acquirer that adjudication will be initiated against the company for any delay in making the public announcement in respect of the acquisition of 17,79,692 shares constituting 27.64 per cent of the paid-up capital of the target company on 19 November 2008.In its order passed on 6 October 2010, SEBI has warned the acquirer that adjudication will be initiated against the company for any delay in making the public announcement in respect of the acquisition of 17,79,692 shares constituting 27.64 per cent of the paid-up capital of the target company on 19 November 2008.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Monday, September 20, 2010

Satyam Computer services ltd. ( Mahindra Satyam) results on 29th september

Satyam Computer services ltd. ( Mahindra Satyam) will announce its Audited Financial Results as per Indian GAAP for the Financial years ended on March 31, 2009 and March 31, 2010 on 29th September 2010.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs(India) to mandate Corporate Social Responsibility Policy

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs have agreed that the Bill may now include provisions to mandate that every company having [(net worth of Rs.500 crore or more, or turnover of Rs.1000 crore or more)] or [a net profit of Rs.5 crore or more during a year] shall be required to formulate a CSR Policy to ensure that every year at least 2% of its average net profits during the three immediately preceding financial years shall be spent on CSR activities as may be approved and specified by the company. The Directors shall be required to make suitable disclosures in this regard in their report to members. 


In case any such company does not have adequate profits or is not in a position to spend prescribed amount on CSR activities, the directors would be required to give suitable disclosure/reasons in their report to the members. 


Standing Committee of Parliament on Finance (SCF) feel that  separate disclosures required to be made by companies in their Annual Report by way of CSR statement indicating the company policy as well as the specific steps taken thereunder will be a sufficient check on non-compliance. 

Poor corporate governance National stock exchange suspended trading in 4 companies from 3rd September 2010

National stock exchange suspended trading in 4 companies from 3rd September 2010 for poor corporate governance

National stock exchange  suspended trading in 4  companies from 3rd September 2010  for poor corporate governance 


From year 1999 to till date ( 3rd September 2010) National Stock Exchange has suspended 148 companies from trading for non compliance of listing agreement.


From  3rd sept 2010 NSE suspended following 4 companies from trading for non compliance of corporate governance.


1.Blue Bird (India) Limited

2.Cranes Software International Limited

3.Steel Tubes of India Limited

4.Ambica Agarbathies & Aroma industries Limited

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Infosys Technologies Q1 FY11 profit down by 8 percent.

Infosys Technologies  Q1 FY11 net profit at Rs 1,488 crore as against Rs 1,617 crore, quarter-on-quarter basis declined by 7.98% 
Revenues at Rs 6,198 crore from Rs 5,944 crore increased by 4.27%.

Friday, June 4, 2010

25% public holding must for all listed companies : Govt

The Government has made amendments to the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules

The salient features of the amendment are as follows:
a)      The minimum threshold level of public holding will be 25% for all listed companies.
b)      Existing listed companies having less than 25% public holding have to reach the  minimum 25% level by an annual  addition  of  not less than 5% to public holding.
c)       For new listing, if the post issue capital of the company calculated at offer price is more than Rs. 4000 crore, the company may be allowed to go public with 10% public shareholding and comply with the 25% public shareholding requirement by increasing its public shareholding by at least 5% per annum. 
d)      For companies whose draft offer document is pending with Securities and Exchange Board of India on or before these amendments are required to comply with 25% public shareholding requirement by increasing its public shareholding by at least 5% per annum, irrespective of the amount of post issue capital of the company calculated at offer price. 
e)      A company may increase its public shareholding by less than 5% in a year if such increase brings its public shareholding to the level of 25% in that year.
f)        The requirement for continuous listing will be the same as the conditions for initial listing.
g)      Every listed company shall maintain public shareholding of at least 25%.  If the public shareholding in a listed company falls below 25% at any time, such company shall bring the public shareholding to 25% within a maximum period of 12 months from the date of such fall.
    The Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules 1957 provide for the requirements which have to be satisfied by companies for the purpose of getting their securities listed on any stock exchange in India.  A dispersed shareholding structure is essential for the sustenance of a continuous market for listed securities to provide liquidity to the investors and to discover fair prices. Further, the larger the number of shareholders, the less is the scope for price manipulation. Accordingly, the Finance Minister in his Budget speech for 2009-10, inter- alia, proposed to raise the threshold for non- promoter, public shareholding for all listed companies. To implement the Budget announcement the Securities Contracts (Regulation) (Amendment) Rules, 2010 have been notified today. 
Source -pib.nic.in


Tuesday, May 25, 2010

NSE bans Pyramid Saimira from trading from June 1 for non - Filling of quarterly corporate governance report

National stock exchange bans Pyramid Saimira from trading from June 1 for non - Filling of quarterly corporate governance report.

Clause 49 of the listing agreement, which is an umbrella regulation on corporate governance norms, mandates companies to submit a quarterly report, signed either by the compliance officer or the CEO, to the stock exchange within 15 days from the close of a quarter.
According to the Exchange public announcement, the company failed to respond to its notice for non-compliance with provisions of listing agreement.



Friday, May 21, 2010

SEBI issued Model Listing Agreement for listing on SME Exchange

Securities Exchange Board of India issued model listing agreement for listing securities on SME exchange 


In recognition of the need for making finance available to small and medium enterprises, SEBI has decided to encourage promotion of dedicated exchanges and/or dedicated platforms of the exchanges for listing and trading of securities issued by Small and Medium Enterprises (“SME”). Consequently, SEBI amended SEBI (Issue of Capital and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2009 (“SEBI (ICDR) Regulations”) by inserting a Chapter XA on “Issue of specified securities by small and medium enterprises”, through notification dated April 13, 2010. In continuation of the same and to facilitate listing of specified securities in the SME exchange

Certain relaxations are provided to the issuers whose securities are listed on SME exchange in comparison to the listing requirements in Main Board, which inter-alia include the following:

a)Companies listed on the SME exchange may send to their shareholders, a statement containing the salient features of all the documents, as prescribed in sub-clause (iv) of clause (b) of proviso to section 219 of the Companies Act, 1956, instead of sending a full Annual Report;

b. Periodical financial results may be submitted on “half yearly basis”, instead of “quarterly basis” and

c. SMEs need not publish their financial results, as required in the Main Board and can make it available on their website.



Saturday, May 8, 2010

83 companies listed in BSE and 47 companies listed in NSE which have not fully complied with clause 49 of the Listing Agreement.

The Government has said that the Companies Act, 1956 does not provide for appointment of Independent Directors. But, as per clause 49 of the Listing Agreement, all the listed companies are required to appoint Independent Directors.
Giving this information in written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha today, the Minsiter for Corporate Affairs, Shri Salman Khurshid told the House that as per the information received from Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI), there are 83 companies listed in BSE and 47 companies listed in NSE which have not fully complied with clause 49 of the Listing Agreement. 

Monday, May 3, 2010

New SEBI rule treat small and institutional investors on par in initial public offerings

A new directive from the market regulator Sebi is coming to effect from  Monday 3rd may 2010 as per which institutional investors will have to pay upfront 100 per cent money in primary issues, just like the retail investors. Earlier, QIBs were required to put only 10 per cent as margin money in public issues, while retail investors were putting the entire 100 per cent along with the applications.


Another move of the regulator coming into effect 3rd may is that the listing time for companies after the completion the initial public offer has been halved to 12 days.
This will help investors to get there refund faster. 

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Questionnaire for small/retail investor survey http://bcomquest.0fees.net/

This survey is part of my  research on Corporate Governance disclosure practices in India.
With this survey i intend to find out awareness of small/retail investor on corporate governance and disclosure  practices of listed companies  in India  (clause 49 of Listing agreement )
my request to  investors to click on the following link and answer my small  questionnaire.
thank you

http://bcomquest.0fees.net/

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Corporate governance code for Unlisted companies in India

The government on Wednesday said that the Securities and Exchange Board of India( SEBI ) guidelines which require listed companies to meet corporate governance norms for best practices in management may now be extended to unlisted companies as well.

"We are harmonising... The appropriate best practices that are seen in Clause 49 (of Sebi’s listing agreement) will have to be brought in the new companies bill,” corporate affairs minister Salman Khursheed said. Best practice standards have to be imposed on everyone appropriately, Khursheed told reporters on the sidelines of an Assocham event. “But the compliance cost has to be kept in mind, looking at different levels and sizes of the companies,” he said.

source  -www.telegraphindia.com

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

SEBI to distribute Rs. 23.28 crores to 12,74,736 unsuccessful (Retail Investor) IPO Applicants

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Audit committee to approve the appointment of Chief financial officer

Audit committee to approve the appointment of Chief financial officer of appointment of ‘CFO’ by the Audit Committee- (Insertion of Clause 49(II)(D)(12A))
In order to ensure that the CFO has adequate accounting and financial management expertise to review and certify the financial statements as required under Clause 49 of the Listing Agreement, SEBI has been decided that the appointment of the CFO is approved by the Audit Committee before finalization of the same by the management. The Audit Committee, while approving the appointment, shall assess the qualifications, experience & background etc. of the candidate.



Source-Listing Conditions-Amendments to the Equity Listing Agreement-CIR/CFD/DIL/1/2010 www.sebi.gov.in

Half -yearly disclosure of Balance sheet item by listed entities

Securities and exchanges board of india as a part of disclosure requirements for listed entities
and also to bring more transparency and efficiency in the governance of listed entities has been decided to specify certain listing conditions so to amend the Equity Listing Agreement.

To have more frequent disclosure of the asset-liability position of entities, SEBI has been decided that listed entities shall disclose within forty-five days from the end of the half-year, as a note to their half-yearly financial results, a statement of assets and liabilities in the specified format.

source.www.sebi.gov.in (Listing Conditions-Amendments to the Equity Listing Agreement) CIR/CFD/DIL/1/2010

SEBI fixed timeline for submission and publication of financial results by listed companies

Securities and exchange board of India fixed Timelines for submission and publication of financial results by listed entities
To streamline the submission of financial results by listed entities by making it uniform and to reduce the timeline for submission of the same to the stock exchanges, SEBI decided that listed entities shall disclose, on standalone or consolidated basis, their quarterly (audited or un-audited with limited review), financial results within 45 days of the end of every quarter.
Secondly, audited annual results on stand-alone as well as consolidated basis, shall be disclosed within 60 days from the end of the financial year for those entities which opt to submit their annual audited results in lieu of the last quarter unaudited financial results with limited review.
and With regard to publication of consolidated financial results alone, the following, viz.,(a) Turnover (b) Profit before tax and (c) Profit after tax on a stand-alone basis shall also be published

(Listing conditions-Amendments to the Equity Listing Agreement CIR/CFD/DIL/1/2010) source www.sebi.gov.in

Sunday, April 4, 2010

SEBI directs exchanges to post all orders on websites

Market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India has directed stock exchanges to post all their regulatory orders and arbitration awards on websites from this fiscal to ensure greater transparency for investors. The exchanges have also been asked to post all such orders since April 1, 2007, on their websites within 30 days. SEBI said the move, prompted by feedback from investor associations, aims at improving transparency in disclosing regulatory orders andarbitration awards issued by stock exchanges. ‘All regulatory orders and arbitration awards as and when issued by Exchanges from the date of this circular (April 1, 2010) shall be posted on their Website immediately,’ said a SEBI circular on Thursday. Besides, it added, that exchanges ’shall post all their regulatory orders and arbitration awards issued since April 1, 2007, on their websites within 30 days.’ It said the directive covers all orders against listed companies and trading/clearing members issued bystock exchanges. SEBI said exchanges will have to inform the regulator about the implementation status of the directive in their monthly/quarterly development report.

source- www. forum4finance.co

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Corporate governance philosophy at Infosys



"The Board of directors is at the crore of our corporate governance practice and oversees how management serves and protects the long-term interest of all our stake holders. we believe that an active, well-informed and independent board is necessary to ensure highest standards of corporate governance.''


(Infosys annual report 2007-08)