The board of the Securities and Exchange Board of India is meeting today to decide on a variety of issues from clarifying norms on differential voting rights in shares to tightening disclosure norms for shares that are considered for pledging.
Tightening encumbrance disclosure by promoters of listed firms is on the agenda today with a growing number of cases in which share value declined sharply after defaults, with lenders scrambling to sell pledged shares.
The regulator already has a set of regulations for encumbrance disclosure. Yet, concerns have been raised recently with mutual funds’ exposure to debt and money market instruments through structured obligations, pledge of shares, non-disposal undertakings, related party transactions or promoter guarantees.
According to Crisil, the total value of shares pledged by promoters is more than Rs 2 lakh crore, involving over 800 companies. Moreover, this data is only for loans against pledged shares and doesn't include other encumbrances such as non-disposal undertakings.
This has implications for the lending community, for such debt is backed by equity shares that are inherently volatile as against cash flows.