Balasubramanian elected as Chairman of Association of Mutual Funds

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Balasubramanian has been elected Chairman of Association of Mutual Funds in India, at the recently concluded board meeting of AMFI.

Balasubramanian is Chief Executive Officer of Aditya Birla Sun Life Asset Management. He would take over from Nilesh Shah, Managing Director, Kotak Mutual Fund.

Balasubramanian earlier served as AMFI Chairman between 2017 and 2019 and now would continue to hold the office till the conclusion of the next AGM.

Radhika Gupta, Chief Executive Officer, Edelweiss Asset Management has been elected as the Vice-Chairperson of AMFI.

A Balasubramanian was also appointed as the ex-officio Chairman of AMFI Financial Literacy Committee, being the Chairman of AMFI.

Shah was elected to be the Chairman of AMFI Valuation Committee.

Radhika Gupta has been re-elected as Chairperson of AMFI ETF Committee.

Sanjay Sapre, President, Franklin Templeton Asset Management (India) was re-elected as the Chairman of AMFI Operations and Compliance Committee.

Vishal Kapoor, Chief Executive Officer, IDFC Asset Management has been elected as the Chairman of AMFI Standing Committee of Certified Distributors (ARN Committee).

These decisions were taken by AMFI, the industry body of SEBI-registered mutual funds at its Board Meeting on Monday.

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HSBC Asia appoints former SBI Chairman Rajnish Kumar as an Independent Director, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Ltd (HSBC) on Monday announced the appointment of Rajnish Kumar as an Independent Non-Executive Director. Kumar will also be a member of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited‘s Audit Committee and Risk Committee of its Asian operations.

The Indian operation is a branch of this Asian entity. HSBC is also listed in the UK as a separate entity called HSBC Plc. Rajnish Kumar retired in October 2020 after a 40-year career at the SBI. His international tenure included stints at SBI’s UK and Canada operations.

“Rajnish‘s depth and breadth of experience across India‘s financial industry will be an invaluable addition to the Board of the Group‘s flagship Asian entity as HSBC directs its focus towards the region. The opportunities presented by its 1.4 billion population, 18 million non-resident Indians and 40,000 MNCs make India a key component of HSBC‘s growth strategy” said Peter Wong, Chairman of the Board, HSBC.

Rajnish Kumar was formerly Chairman of the State Bank of India (SBI), until he retired in October 2020 following a distinguished 40-year career with the SBI. In addition to his extensive background with regulatory authorities, investors and businesses in India, Kumar has strong experience of global business and financial markets from his work with the SBI in the UK and Canada. During his tenure as Chairman of the SBI, he also led the strengthening of the bank‘s digital banking platform.

He is also currently a director of India’s Lighthouse Communities Foundation, an independent director of Larsen & Toubro Infotech, a senior advisor of Baring Private Equity Asia Pte Ltd in Singapore and an advisor of Kotak Investment Advisors Ltd in Mumbai.



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Three in the race to become PNB’s second shareholder director

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Three persons are in the race to being elected as a shareholder director in Punjab National Bank (PNB), the country’s second largest public sector bank, at the upcoming extraordinary general meeting (EGM) of shareholders on March 17.

The Board of Directors of PNB had, at its meeting held on Friday, found three candidates — out of total nominations of four persons received by the bank as of March 2 — as “fit and proper” for being elected as a shareholder director of the bank, sources said.

PNB convenes EGM to elect a 2nd shareholder director to its Board

The three persons, all aged 66 years, who are in the fray are Gautam Guha (from New Delhi), Padmanabhan A A (from Chennai) and Ramesh Chandra Agrawal (from Prayagraj), they added. All the three have experience in the area of banking.

PNB is now looking to rope in its second shareholder director on the strength of a recent Finance Ministry decision empowering Public Sector Bank (PSB) boards to act on the decisions that remained held up at various board-level committees due to lack of quorum arising from vacancies or recusal by existing directors.

PNB to raise ₹2,500 cr via AT-1 bonds by March 15: CEO

A shareholder director is one who is elected from among shareholders other than the Central government. A public sector bank has two main categories of shareholders — Central government and ‘other shareholders’ (public shareholders). In India, all the public sector banks are listed entities although none of them are registered as companies under the Companies Act. There is separate legislation to govern the Board composition of such PSBs.

The elected shareholder director is finally appointed by the Nomination and Remuneration Committee (NRC) of the bank Board concerned. PNB currently does not have the requisite NRC strength and is therefore looking to get another shareholder director through Board approval route after election of such a director by the shareholders of the bank at an EGM.

Recent QIP

PNB has moved to get another shareholder director after its recent nearly ₹3,788-crore qualified institutional placement (QIP), which saw the Centre’s shareholding in the bank drop from 85.59 per cent to 76.87 per cent. With the Centre’s shareholding coming down, PNB became technically eligible to have two shareholder directors.

Having an additional shareholder director on a Board is useful for banks like PNB as all shareholder directors are counted as independent directors for the purpose of compliance with SEBI regulations for listed entities.

In public sector banks, there are executive directors appointed by Central government, there is government nominee director (official of Central government), there is an RBI nominee director, two employee directors (representing workmen and officers) and other directors (shareholder directors).

This will be the second shareholder director for PNB besides Asha Bhandarker, who was elected on September 12, 2018, for a period of three years.

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PNB convenes EGM to elect a 2nd shareholder director to its Board

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Punjab National Bank (PNB), the country’s second largest public sector bank, has convened an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on March 17 to elect ‘one shareholder director’. This will be a virtual meeting of shareholders.

This move is significant as the bank is now looking to rope in its second shareholder director on the strength of a recent Finance Ministry decision empowering Public Sector Banks ( PSB) boards to act on the decisions that remained held up at various board-level committees due to lack of quorum arising from vacancies or recusal by existing directors.

A shareholder director is one who is elected from among shareholders other than central government. A public sector bank has two main categories of shareholders— central government and ‘other shareholders’ (public shareholders). In India, all the public sector banks are listed entities although none of them are registered as companies under the Companies Act. There are separate legislations that govern the Board composition of such PSBs.

 

The elected shareholder director is finally appointed by the Nomination and Remuneration Committee (NRC) of the bank Board concerned. PNB currently does not have the requisite NRC strength and is therefore looking to get another shareholder director through Board approval route after election of such a director by the shareholders of the bank at an EGM.

PNB has moved to get another shareholder director after its recent nearly ₹3,788 crore qualified institutional placement (QIP), which saw the centre’s shareholding in the bank drop from 85.59 per cent to 76.87 per cent. With the Centre’s shareholding coming down, PNB became technically eligible to have two shareholder directors.

Having an additional shareholder director on a Board is useful for Banks like PNB as all shareholder directors are counted as independent directors for the purpose of compliance with SEBI regulations for listed entities.

In Boards of public sector banks, there are executive directors appointed by central government, there is government nominee director (official of central government), there is a RBI nominee director, two employee directors ( representing workmen and officers) and other directors (shareholder directors).

This will be the second shareholder director for PNB besides Asha Bhandarker, who was elected on September 12,2018 for a period of three years.

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IDRBT gets new director – The Hindu BusinessLine

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D Janakiram has taken over as the new director of the Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology (IDRBT), an arm of Reserve Bank of India.

Before joining IDRBT, he was a senior professor of computer science and engineering department, IIT Madras. He was also a Visiting Professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in the USA.

His current research focusses on building large scale distributed systems and challenges in big data processing and cloud computing and blockchain technologies.

”Janakiram brings with him immense experience in various fields of direct relevance to Banking and Financial Technology,’’ IDRBT said in a release issued on Monday.

A PhD from IIT Delhi, he was awarded the Boyscast Fellowship in 1997, the IBM Faculty Award in 2007 and Yahoo Faculty Grant in 2009. Having wrote over 150 research papers, Janakiram is the editor of six books. He authored on Grid Computing, Building Large Scale Software Systems and Grid and Cloud Computing.

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