Narayana Murthy Asks Infosys to Make Panaya Report Public; Co Says No
Tensions between founders and company emerge again
Infosys co-founder N R Narayana Murthy’s concerns over governance
lapses at the company have resurfaced. Murthy has asked the company to
make the recent Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher report public.
In a recent communication to the Infosys board, Murthy questioned why executives such as Ritika Suri —
who was a member of the team that acquired Israeli firm Panaya — quit
Infosys soon after the global law firm gave a clean chit. Suri, a former
colleague at SAP of Infosys Chief Executive Officer Vishal Sikka, was
head of corporate development and ventures, when the deal was signed in
April 2015 and she quit the firm in June this year.
Since then, several executives have quit Infosys, including its
Americas Head Sandeep Dadlani, Anirban Dey, chief business officer of
Edge products at EdgeVerve, and Yusuf Bashir, global head of Infys’
$500-million innovation fund.
The summary findings made public by Infosys in June had looked at the
questionable severance payout made to former chief financial officer
Rajiv Bansal, expenses incurred by Sikka and whistleblower complaints to
market regulators Sebi and the US Securities and Exchange Commission
over alleged improprieties in the $200-million acquisition of Panaya.
Murthy did not respond to an email seeking comment. Infosys said in a
response that the company did not plan to make the report public.
“The investigation involved interviews of over 50 witnesses in India,
the US, and elsewhere, the review of company policies, board minutes,
public filings and internal documents, the collection, search and review
by Gibson, Dunn attorneys of many thousands of internal emails and
attachments, the use of forensic accounting experts to analyse technical
and financial information, the review of public filings and media
accounts in multiple countries, the review of the CAM reports and
supporting documentation, and other investigative measures,” said
Infosys, pointing to the summary findings it released on its website in
June.
A former senior executive of Infosys said the recent exits of senior
executives who were involved in this particular transaction and a
company such as Infosys’ “no plan” to make the report public “raises
more questions than answers”.
It has obliged Murthy by taking his nominee D N Prahlad on the board
and elevated Ravi Venkatesan, an independent director, as a co-chairman
and the Chairman R Seshasayee, making public that he would retire next
year.
Murthy’s letter comes even as Sikka celebrates the completion of three
years at the helm of India’s second largest software exporter. In a
separate mail to employees on Thursday, Sikka emphasised the need to let
go instead of holding on to the past without any reference to the
ongoing tussle with Murthy.
“Recently, when I turned 50, another anniversary, a great teacher of my life gave me a rare book of reflections by Hermann Hesse. In it, I found this one gem: Some of us think holding on makes us strong, but sometimes it is letting go,” wrote Sikka, asking nearly 200,000 Infosys employees to think of the future. “The future is really a construction of now. A string of beautiful, momentous, nows. We live with an illusion of permanence, but all we really have is the now, with their beauty, their opportunity, their challenge, their ephemerality,” he wrote to the employees.
“Recently, when I turned 50, another anniversary, a great teacher of my life gave me a rare book of reflections by Hermann Hesse. In it, I found this one gem: Some of us think holding on makes us strong, but sometimes it is letting go,” wrote Sikka, asking nearly 200,000 Infosys employees to think of the future. “The future is really a construction of now. A string of beautiful, momentous, nows. We live with an illusion of permanence, but all we really have is the now, with their beauty, their opportunity, their challenge, their ephemerality,” he wrote to the employees.
Reference - http://www.business-standard.com/article/companies/narayana-murthy-asks-infosys-to-make-panaya-report-public-firm-says-no-117080301600_1.html
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