

Three rulings by India’s Securities Appellate Tribunal that could improve corporate governance
Three recent orders of the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) mark an inflection point in Indian securities law. Individually, they address disclosure lapses, alleged accounting manipulation, fraud under Sebi’s Prohibition of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices relating to Securities Market (PFUTP) Regulations, initial public offering (IPO) fund utilization and interim relief. Collectively, they pose a larger question: What model of corporate governance enforcement is India converging towards—the letter of the law, substantive transparency or calibrated market pragmatism?The first ruling, in the Varun Beverages case, sharpens the meaning of disclosure.
The company had prominently announced board approval of a share purchase agreement to acquire SBC Tanzania. When the transaction collapsed because the conditions precedent were not met, no standalone disclosure followed. Instead, the termination was mentioned in the notes to its quarterly results.
SAT rejected that as adequate compliance. Its message: material information buried in fine print is no disclosure at all.This is not a technical reprimand; it is a doctrinal clarification. Regulation 30 of the Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR) framework is intended to ensure that material events reach the market in a timely and intelligible manner.
An acquisition signals strategic direction and capital-allocation intent. Its failure is equally price-sensitive. To headline the deal’s approval and footnote its collapse distorts market understanding.
Read on livemint.com