Infosys Buyback Gets Approval From Sebi
Sources say Sebi allowed fungibility for Infosys ADRs, GDRs so holders can tender shares in buyback
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has approved Infosys'
share buyback and also offered a solution for participation by holders
of the company’s American Depository Receipts (ADRs) and Global
Depository Receipts (GDRs).
The cash-rich technology major had in April proposed to pay Rs 13,000 crore to shareholders through a buyback, but the proposal was tied in regulatory knots, while rivals Wipro and HCL Technologies went ahead with their share repurchase programmes.
According to sources, Sebi has allowed fungibility for Infosys ADRs
and GDRs so that their holders can tender their shares in the buyback.
This will allow depository receipts to be converted into domestic shares
for tendering and reconverted into depository receipts if not accepted
in the buyback.
The current regulatory framework does not allow such fungibility and Sebi has
approved it in principle as a special case, according to sources. The
approval was granted in consultation with the US Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), the sources added.
“The US SEC asked Sebi to allow direct buyback of shares so that ADR holders can also benefit from the buyback. After various rounds of consultations, Sebi recommended that ADR holders could convert ADRs into stocks and then tender,” an official said.
Sources said the Infosys management recently met Sebi officials to clear the regulatory hurdle. An email to Infosys went unanswered.
As a substantial portion of Infosys shares are held as ADRs and GDRs, the company had to ensure all shareholders received the benefit of the buyback. This, however, meant Infosys had to deal with multiple regulators.
“Every regulator has different rules. In the case of Infosys, each of
them will want to resolve the issue without compromising the interests
of their shareholders,” said Sudhir Bassi, partner, Khaitan & Co.
Infosys is likely to opt for a tender, where eligible shareholders must
inform the company of the number of shares they intend to part with. In
case the buyback is oversubscribed, shares are accepted
proportionately. Both the promoters and public shareholders can offer their shares in the tender. An open market buyback allows only public shareholders to offer their shares. In 2012, the Sebi overhauled regulations to ensure only companies with serious intentions announced share buybacks.
Reference - http://www.business-standard.com/article/companies/infosys-buyback-gets-approval-from-sebi-117081700074_1.html
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