Vikram Bakshi-McDonald's tussle: Bakshi gets a stay on arbitration
The case has been going on at the CLB since last year, but Bakshi had moved Delhi High Court earlier this month
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The case has been going on at the CLB since last year, but Bakshi had moved Delhi High Court earlier this month
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Earlier on November 7, Bakshi had offered to sell his stake in the joint venture Connaught Plaza Restaurants, which operates fast-food restaurants in the north and east of India, for Rs 1,800 crore. McDonald's had rejected the offer but failed to present a counter offer in the next hearing. Bakshi had earlier rejected McDonald's offer of Rs 48-50 crore to buy his stake, based on a complicated formula. Bakshi had asked for an independent valuer to determine the right valuation.
According to sources, Bakshi had valued his stake at Rs 2,500 crore, and later brought down to Rs 1,800 crore.
Bakshi had informed the CLB in the previous hearing that McDonald's offer went against the Foreign Exchange Management Act because it only provided for return on equity. His counsel argued the valuation did not capture Bakshi's work over 18 years in building McDonald's as a leading brand in India.
Prior to this, Bakshi had offered to buy McDonald's stake in Connaught Plaza Restaurants at net asset value, around Rs 150 crore at the time. He had said he was not keen on retaining the brand and would prefer to start his own food and beverage venture. In 2008, McDonald's had proposed Bakshi sell his stake for $5 million. It later raised the offer to $7 million. Bakshi refused to sell at such a valuation. Grant Thornton had valued the business at $331 million.
CLARIFICATION
An earlier version of this report said the Monday order was an ex parte one. The company has clarified that this was not. We stand corrected.
First Published: Dec 23 2014 | 12:44 AM IST