Reuters :
Indian regulators have launched an unprecedented drive to boost corporate transparency, bombarding firms with disclosure demands, but clumsy execution has created suspicions of a box-ticking exercise that may not entirely achieve its aim.
Poor disclosure among India-listed firms is a turnoff for foreign investors, a weakness Asia’s third-largest economy can ill afford as competition for overseas capital heats up among emerging markets in expectation of higher US interest rates.
A Reuters review shows Mumbai’s National Stock Exchange, India’s biggest bourse, issued 934 requests for clarification to its top 500 listed companies since revamped disclosure rules took effect in Sept 30 last year.
That is almost double the 492 requests the top 500 received over the course of the entire preceding decade.
Requests in the past 14 months have ranged from queries on market rumours to news reports, but repetitive and sometimes misdirected questions mean that firms, analysts and some investors are questioning the impact of the campaign.
“There’s just no fantastic value added in this entire process,” said the chief financial officer of one of India’s 20 largest listed companies.
“We are going through the motions of the efforts because we can’t be seen as being indifferent to the queries raised.” To be sure, many inquiries are pertinent and investors say there has been a gradual improvement in corporate governance in recent years, but executives say the disclosure drive is littered with redundant, time-wasting requests.
For example, BSE Ltd, India’s second-biggest exchange, queried HCL Technologies on an acquisition that the firm had disclosed the previous day.
In other cases, analysts said, exchanges confused the impacted units or even the companies at stake: sending a clarification for information to Electrosteel Steels instead of Electrosteel Castings, or to Vedanta-owned Cairn India instead of the separate, UK-listed firm Cairn Energy.
Anxious executives
India’s two biggest stock exchanges enforce disclosure rules at the behest of the regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).
Indian regulators have launched an unprecedented drive to boost corporate transparency, bombarding firms with disclosure demands, but clumsy execution has created suspicions of a box-ticking exercise that may not entirely achieve its aim.
Poor disclosure among India-listed firms is a turnoff for foreign investors, a weakness Asia’s third-largest economy can ill afford as competition for overseas capital heats up among emerging markets in expectation of higher US interest rates.
A Reuters review shows Mumbai’s National Stock Exchange, India’s biggest bourse, issued 934 requests for clarification to its top 500 listed companies since revamped disclosure rules took effect in Sept 30 last year.
That is almost double the 492 requests the top 500 received over the course of the entire preceding decade.
Requests in the past 14 months have ranged from queries on market rumours to news reports, but repetitive and sometimes misdirected questions mean that firms, analysts and some investors are questioning the impact of the campaign.
“There’s just no fantastic value added in this entire process,” said the chief financial officer of one of India’s 20 largest listed companies.
“We are going through the motions of the efforts because we can’t be seen as being indifferent to the queries raised.” To be sure, many inquiries are pertinent and investors say there has been a gradual improvement in corporate governance in recent years, but executives say the disclosure drive is littered with redundant, time-wasting requests.
For example, BSE Ltd, India’s second-biggest exchange, queried HCL Technologies on an acquisition that the firm had disclosed the previous day.
In other cases, analysts said, exchanges confused the impacted units or even the companies at stake: sending a clarification for information to Electrosteel Steels instead of Electrosteel Castings, or to Vedanta-owned Cairn India instead of the separate, UK-listed firm Cairn Energy.
Anxious executives
India’s two biggest stock exchanges enforce disclosure rules at the behest of the regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).