SAT quashes NSE’s directive to Axis Bank in Karvy case, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, In a relief to Axis Bank, the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) has quashed a direction issued by NSE that funds lying in the bank account of Karvy Stock Broking are the assets of the exchange’s defaulter committee. The order came after Axis Bank challenged the communication issued on December 8, 2020 by NSE holding that the bank accounts of Karvy become the assets of the defaulter committee of the exchange since the stock broker has been declared a defaulter and expelled from the membership of the bourse.

Axis Bank challenged the communication on the ground that the exchange has no power to issue any directions to the bank to freeze its accounts on which the lender has a banker’s lien.

It also contended that Axis Bank is a commercial bank and not a trading member and therefore is not bound by Sebi laws, including the bye laws of the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd (NSE).

“We are of the opinion that respondent no.1 (NSE) had no jurisdiction to hold that the funds lying in the account of Karvy Stock Broking Ltd are assets of the committee as per…NSE bye laws,” SAT said in an order on Monday.

Citing NSE bye laws, the tribunal said the vesting of the assets in the defaulters committee is limited and cannot include all the assets of Karvy, the defaulter. Only such security deposited with the stock exchange vests with the defaulters committee.

In addition, other monies, securities and other assets due, payable or deliverable to the defaulter by any other trading member also vest with the defaulters committee, it added.

“The bye law 12 makes it apparently clear that a defaulter committee can only issue directions against the trading member and cannot issue any direction to a third party, namely, the appellant (Axis Bank) who admittedly is not a trading member,” SAT noted.

It further said NSE does not get any jurisdiction to pass such order based on Sebi’s confirmatory order.

The confirmatory order asked NSE to initiate appropriate action against Karvy for violation of its bye laws. It also allowed the exchange to invite and deal with claims of the clients in accordance with its bye law, the tribunal noted.

“The impugned communication issued by NSE dated 8th December, 2020 invoking bye law 11 of its bye laws is totally without jurisdiction and is quashed,” SAT said.

It was alleged that in the course of its banking business, Axis Bank had granted several credit facilities to Karvy, which owed Rs 165 crore alongwith interest to the lender.

Also, it is alleged that on January 27, 2021, Axis Bank had Rs 8.27 crore in the bank account and fixed deposit accounts of the lender. Of the Rs 8.27 crore, a sum of Rs 7.98 crore was the exclusive property of Karvy and the balance amount of Rs 28.66 lakh belonged to clients and other parties.

Sebi, through an interim order in November 2019, put several restrictions on Karvy, including prohibiting the brokerage from taking new clients in respect of its stock broking activities as it had misused clients’ securities by unauthorisedly pledging the securities.

Among others, the regulator had directed the stock exchange to initiate appropriate action against Karvy for violation of bye laws. This order was confirmed by the regulator in November 2020.

Further, Karvy was declared a defaulter in November 2020 under the bye laws of NSE and was accordingly dismissed from the membership of the exchange as a trading member. PTI SP ABM ABM



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PNB Housing Finance plans to raise Rs 35,000 crore debt as Carlyle deal in abeyance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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PNB Housing Finance is now looking to raise Rs 35,000 crore debt, after facing legal hurdles in the Carlyle group deal, days after SAT gave a split verdict in the matter.

The company will seek shareholders’ nod in its annual general meeting (AGM) on September 3, 2021, PNB Housing Finance said in a regulatory filing.

The company said it will seek shareholders’ approval for further fund raising by way of debt issue.

“Shareholders’ approval is being sought in the 33rd AGM for further fund raising by way of debt issue and the shareholders are being requested to authorise the board of directors to offer, from time to time, the subscription of redeemable, secured/unsecured non-convertible debentures aggregating to Rs 35,000 crore in one or more tranches,” it said in the filing.

On Monday, Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) gave a split verdict in the company’s appeal to the court in the matter related to Rs 4,000 crore equity fund infusion led by its existing investor Carlyle group, and others through preferential allotment of shares and warrants.

Had the deal not stuck into regulatory and legal hurdles, the company would have been successful in raising the equity capital.

The Carlyle deal

The Carlyle-led deal was announced on May 31, in which a clutch of investors including former HDFC Bank MD&CEO Aditya Puri‘s family investment vehicle Salisbury Investments, were to infuse equity capital in PNB Housing. Puri is also a senior advisor for Carlyle in Asia.

However, the deal soon got into a controversy after a proxy advisory firm raised issues and said it would hurt the interest of the minority shareholders as well the promoter. It said the issue price of Rs 390 apiece was too low vis-a-vis the prevailing stock price.

Subsequently, Sebi asked the company to get the valuation of the issue price done from an independent registered valuer, while the company approached the SAT in June, citing it followed the Sebi guidelines on deciding on the price.

The SAT order

SAT in its order, by the two-member bench of Justice Tarun Agarwala and Justice M T Joshi said:”In view of the difference of opinion between the members of the bench “we direct the interim order dated 21st June, 2021 to continue till further order.” Prevalence of interim order means the company can’t disclose the results of the shareholders’ voting that happened on June 22, to know if they cleared the proposal with requisite majority or not.

The company has been looking to raise funds for the past few years. Also, the Reserve Bank of India earlier this year had barred PNB from infusing capital into its subsidiary.

The Carlyle matter is likely to reach the Supreme Court since the tribunal did not provide a clear verdict on the way forward for the deal.



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Sebi imposes Rs 10 lakh fine on Karvy Financial Services for not making open offer timely, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Markets regulator Sebi has levied a fine of Rs 10 lakh on Karvy Financial Services Ltd for delay in making public announcement to acquire shares of Regaliaa Reality Ltd.

” … by not making the mandatory public announcement within the stipulated time period the Noticee has violated the statutory requirements of law and accordingly, the Noticee has to be penalised for the same,” Sebi said.

Karvy Financial made public announcement for open offer with a delay of 81 days, in violation of Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers (SAST) norms.

The probe found that Karvy had extended a loan amount of Rs 7 crore to Regaliaa whose promoters had pledged 55.56 per cent of the paid-up share capital in favour of Karvy, in addition to the securities for availing the loan.

Karvy invoked the pledge as the firm defaulted on payment of instalments. This took its shareholding in the company to 55.56 per cent, thereby breaching the threshold of 25 per cent as stipulated under SAST norms.

Sebi then directed Karvy in October 2016 to make the public announcement to acquire shares of the target company within 45 days.

However, aggrieved by the regulator’s order, Karvy filed an appeal before the Securities Appellate Tribunal which was dismissed in April 2018, thereby reaffirming Sebi’s decision.

Accordingly, it was required to make the public announcement within 45 days from the date of the tribunal’s order but it made the announcement only in August 2018, with a delay of 81 days.

In a separate order on Wednesday, Sebi has disposed of enforcement proceedings against the depositories — CDSL and NSDL.

The order came after Sebi carried out an inspection to ascertain whether the depositories had conformed with the share reconciliation-related responsibility.

Sebi, while disposing of the matter, noted that the case of violation of market norms against the depositories does not stand established.



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Securities & Appellate Tribunal says it can function without a technical member

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Can the Securities and Appellate Tribunal (SAT) hear matters in the absence of a technical member in the bench? In response to an objection raised by market regulator SEBI on SAT hearing cases without a technical member, the two member bench has ruled that it has the authority to run the tribunal.

In a rare instance, SAT has also marked its order copy to the Finance Ministry and the Supreme Court, and asked for it to be treated as a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Apex court. SAT members were more amused when SEBI effectively questioned their ability to run the tribunal, lawyers present in the hearing said.

The members

SEBI questioned the current composition of SAT, which is currently presided by Justice Tarun Agarwala, the former Chief Justice of Meghalaya High Court, and Justice MT Joshi of the Bombay High Court.

Both Agarwala and Joshi have over three decades of experience of working with Indian judicial system. Third SAT member, CKG Nair who was the technical member retired earlier this year and SAT is awaiting another appointment in his place.

However, lawyers were of the view that in 2018, Nair was alone hearing matters for several years when appointment of the two legal members was delayed and then SEBI had no objections.

“In effect, the stand of SEBI, though it has not been stated in so many words, is that this tribunal should not hear appeals till such time technical member is appointed by the Central government. Similar assertion is being made by SEBI while filing their replies in other appeals and, therefore, it has become imminent to decide this issue,” the two member bench said.

SAT told SEBI that the the tribunals are established in aid of the constitutional courts and inclusion of technical members is only to bring specialised knowledge but that does not mean that it can substitute a judicial member nor can it mean that a judicial member does not possess specialised knowledge.

“SEBI has the option to take it in appeal to SC. SAT cannot remain defunct till the government appoints a technical member. If SAT had taken any other interpretation, it would have paralysed the appeal mechanism against SEBI Orders in India which is not desirable. It is perplexing why a regulator like SEBI had taken this stand while Depositories, Stock Exchanges, IRDAI, PFRDA did not talk like this,” said Sumit Agrawal, Founder, Regstreet Law Advisors.

Driven by rules

SAT observed that the contention of SEBI was driven by rules that state that every bench must have at least one technical member a mandatory provision and since the current bench are of judicial members, the constitution of the bench is defective and orders passed by this bench would be coram non judice (not before a judge)

“In light of section 15R of the SEBI Act, 1992, a temporary gap would not harm the quorum of the bench. In any case all the SC cases on tribunals deal with absence of a judicial member and that too, permanently. The tribunal must keep functioning with the current load of cases going up because of Covid,” said Sandeep Parekh, Finsec Law Advisors.

SAT said it would deal with the question of whether the vacancy in the SAT office of a technical member was fatal to the constitution of the tribunal?

Relying upon past SC orders and constitution of bench, the SAT observed that it had the right to hear the cases.

“The principle has been laid down by the SC that any proceedings taken before the tribunal cannot be questioned in any manner on the ground of any defect in the constitution of SAT. It protects the legality and validity of the orders passed by the Tribunal even if it is found that there was a defect in the constitution of the tribunal,” SAT said.

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SAT asks LIC, SBI, Bank of Baroda to develop protocols to comply with securities laws, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: In a firmly-worded order, the Securities Appellate Tribunal urged state-owned enterprises to form protocols to comply with applicable laws and regulations.

“It is necessary that governmental entities, including public sector undertakings, need to develop protocols for coming out from being prisoners of protracted procedures for complying with applicable laws and regulations timely, because as legal entities accountability falls on them,” the Tribunal said.

The Tribunal said that all rules and regulations should be equally applicable to every legal entity irrespective of its ownership. “Only such an approach would bring in clarity and certainty to laws and regulations and a predictable rule of law regime,” it added.

SAT’s advise takes prominence in the context of concerns that the capital market rules are not applied in the same spirit to public sector undertakings as they are to private sector listed companies.

The Tribunal was presiding over an appeal made by Life Insurance Corp of India, Bank of Baroda and State Bank of India against a Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) order against them with respect to violations of certain mutual fund norms.

In August, the capital market regulator had imposed a fine of Rs 10 lakh each on the three appellants for violating SEBI’s mutual fund regulations, under which a sponsor of one mutual fund cannot hold a more than 10 per cent stake in another mutual fund.

LIC, SBI and Bank of Baroda each have their own mutual funds but also hold significant stakes in UTI Asset Management Co.

SAT has turned the monetary penalty for the three state-owned entities into a warning as it found no “justifiable” reasons to impose a monetary penalty on the violators.

“In these matters, a warning is sufficient. Further, SEBI is at liberty to impose penalty for similar violations in future,” the Tribunal said.



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