"Excuse me, please listen. There is nobody else as a shareholder, neither Reliance nor Birla. This is totally owned by the Government of India and the employees. And of course one million shareholders like you. Please don't talk out of turn," Naik told a shareholder while addressing the group's infotech arm LTI's AGM here.
In 1987, the late Ambani had managed to wrest sufficient holding in the cash-rich L&T and then launched a hostile takeover bid in 1989.
However, political and other developments ensured Reliance becoming a passive shareholder. In 2001, it attempted to sell its over 10 per cent stake to Aditya Birla group's Grasim, L&T's competitor in the cement business.
Naik, the then managingdirector and chief executive, strongly opposed any change in majority ownership and is said to have called upon the employees to work so hard that the higher stock prices dissuade any raiders.
Individual retail investors also have close to 20 per cent stake in the company.
Naik, 75, will be hanging up his boots on October 1 after putting in as many as 53 years and today chaired the last of three AGMs, which started with the flagship parent's on Tuesday, where he had turned emotional.
At the LTI meet today, Naik said the infotech arm is targeting to hire over 1,300 on the current base of over 21,000 employees. The company is also negotiating to add a few moremulti-million dollar clients whose billing can go up to USD 100 million, he said, adding moves are also on to do more acquisitions.
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