The board of Fortis Healthcare was to consider financial results for July-September and October-December 2017 quarters at its meeting today.
In a regulatory filing, the company said the meeting of the board of directors for today will go as scheduled and would consider the resignation of promoters, Malvinder Mohan Singh and Shivinder Mohan Singh from the board.
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Called for an explanation by stock exchanges, Fortis had on February 9 stated: "Fortis Hospitals Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis Healthcare Ltd, has deployed funds in secured short-term investments with companies in the normal course of treasury operations.
"These entities have become part of the promoter group due to a shareholding change in those entities. Subsequently, the same loans have been recognised as related party transactions."
The loans amounting to Rs 473 crore are adequately secured and repayment has since commenced, it added.
In the regulatory filing today, Fortis said it has paid a fine of Rs 65.98 lakh to stock exchanges for "non-submission of un-audited financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2017."
Media reports, it said, had enhanced "the scope of limited review audit by the statutory auditors for the quarters ended September 30, 2017, and December 31, 2017, which we also acknowledge and consider just and equitable in the interest of governance and investors at large."
"While the normal audit process was going on smoothly, after the aforesaid news items, our interaction with auditors indicates that the audit process may not complete before the stipulated date of the board meeting," it said.
The board at its meeting today would discuss at length the resignation of executive chairman Malvinder Mohan Singh and vice chairman Shivinder Mohan Singh.
"The said resignations will reduce the strength of the board from 7 to 5 and a discussion on this will also happen at the aforesaid meeting. This has created an impact on the overall process of completion of the audit process," the filing said.
Fortis sought an extension for approving the financial results of the two quarters till February 28.
The Singh brothers are also facing a lawsuit brought by New York-based private equity firm Siguler Guff & Co, which accused them of "siphoning" money out of another publicly- traded firm they control to help them manage their personal debts, according to Bloomberg.
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