The share buyback -- which will be the first in the company's 36-year history -- has been a long standing demand by some of the founders and high-profile former executives, who have been pushing Infosys to return surplus capital to its shareholders.
Bowing to the demand, the Bengaluru-based company had in April announced that it will pay up to Rs 13,000 crore to shareholders during the current financial year through dividend and/or share buyback.
The IT firm had recently adopted a new Articles of Association that included a provision for buyback.
It added that the outcome of the board meeting will be disseminated to the stock exchanges after the conclusion of the meeting.
The company, however, did not outline the details of the proposed share buyback in the regulatory intimation.
Reacting to the announcement, shares of Infosys were trading higher than yesterday and closed at Rs 1,021.15 apiece, up 4.54 per cent.
Infosys said the trading window has been closed with immediate effect and will re-open on August 22, 2017.
Infosys had cash and cash equivalents worth over USD 3.5 billion on its books as of June 30, 2017.
Infosys, during the company's 36th AGM in June, had said it was in the process of finalising a suitable "distribution mechanism" for its Rs 13,000-crore capital allocation plan.
"As the company has a large shareholder base and is listed in multiple countries, the manner of distribution to shareholders requires compliance under laws of several jurisdictions," Infosys Chairman R Seshasayee had said.
A number of tech companies have announced share buyback programmes this year to offer rich returns to shareholders.
While Infosys' larger rival TCS offered Rs 16,000- crore mega buyback offer to shareholders, rivals like Cognizant, Wipro, HCL Technologies and Mindtree have also made similar announcements.
The development comes amid a tussle between some of its founders, including N R Narayana Murthy, and the management over a range of issues like alleged corporate governance lapses at the firm, higher compensation paid to CEO Vishal Sikka and severance package extended to certain former executives.
The comments came in response to Murthy's earlier statement where he had said that he regretted quitting as chairman of Infosys in 2014 and added that he should have listened to other co-founders and stayed on.
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