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Stock Holding drags broking arm to CLB

Press Trust Of India New Delhi
Stock Holding Corporation of India has dragged its own broking arm SHCIL Services to the Company Law Board and sought a probe after it was found the management misused authority and secretly agreed to sell up to 40 per cent stake to a doubtful foreign investor.
 
SHCIL, the country's largest custodian of securities, has also accused SHCIL Services's chairman and managing director R Jayaraman Iyer, chief executive S Ramanathan and six other directors of fraud and mismanagement.
 
Incidentally, Iyer was also CMD of SHCIL and Ramanathan executive vice-president when the alleged fraud was committed. The two officials have since been reportedly removed by the SHCIL board.
 
The other directors - V Subramaniam, Vivek Vaishnav, R Ravindran, Quek Jin Oon, Lee Keen Whye and Nitin Jog - were also on the payroll of SHCIL till early 2006.
 
Acting on the plea, CLB chairman N Balasubramanian issued notices to all directors and froze their voting rights.
 
SHCIL is jointly promoted and owned by financial institutions and banks such as LIC, GIC, ICICI Bank, UTI, IDBI and IFCI. It is the country's largest depository company.
 
In its plea, SHCIL alleged Iyer and Ramanathan "deliberately and with ulterior motive" allotted shares of SSL to Singapore's E-Ventures Capital by FDI route. After allotment, SHCIL was left with only 24 per cent stake in SSL.
 
"The shares were allotted in a clandestine and surreptitious manner without proper due diligence and proper identification... Thereby changing the management control," SHCIL contended in its petition.

 
 

 

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First Published: Jun 19 2007 | 12:00 AM IST

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