CHAPTER 7
PSUs LISTED ON STOCK EXCHANGES
7.1 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Corporate Governance is the system by which Companies are
directed and controlled in the best interest of the stakeholders and others to
ensure greater transparency and better and timely financial reporting. The Board
of Directors is responsible for the governance of companies. The Companies Act
1956 was amended in December 2000 by providing, inter alia, Directors’
responsibility statement (Section 217) to be attached to the Director’s report
to the Shareholders and formation of Audit Committee by companies having paid up
share capital of Rs.5 crore and above (Section 292-A). According to Section 217
(2AA) of the Act, the Board of Directors has to report to the shareholders that
they have taken proper and sufficient care for the maintenance of accounting
record; for safeguarding the assets of the company and for preventing and
detecting fraud and other irregularities. According to Section 292 -A of the
Companies Act, 1956 notified in December 2000, every public limited company
having paid up capital of not less than Rs. 5 crore shall constitute an Audit
Committee at the Board level. The Audit Committee should have a minimum of 3
Directors of which two thirds of the total number of such Directors shall be
Directors other than Managing Directors or whole time Directors. It has also
been provided in the Act that the statutory auditors, internal auditors, if any,
and the Director in charge of Finance should attend and participate in the
meetings of the Audit Committee but without any voting rights.
A similar concept has also been introduced through clause 49
of the listing agreements for listed companies as issued by Securities and
Exchange Board of India (SEBI). The listing agreement also provides that the
Board of Directors of such companies shall have an optimum combination of
executive and non-executive Directors with not less than 50 percent of the Board
of Directors comprising of non-executive Directors. It also provides that listed
companies having paid up capital of Rs.3 crore and above should have a qualified
and independent Audit Committee latest by March 2002.
There are 37 Central Public Sector Companies, which have been
listed in various stock exchanges of the country. A review undertaken by Audit
in some of the listed PSUs revealed as under:
A. Composition of Board of Directors
Bharat Heavy Electrical Limited, IBP Company Limited, Chennai
Petroleum Corporation Limited, Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilizers Limited, The
Fertilizers and Chemicals Travancore Limited, Neyveli Lignite Corporation
Limited and Kochi Refineries Limited being listed Companies have not yet
fulfilled the requirement of clause 49 (I) (A) of the listing agreement as they
did not have minimum 50 percent independent Directors on their Board exclusive
of Government nominee Directors. Government nominees on the Board of PSUs are
not to be considered as independent Directors in view of a clarification by SEBI.
B. Attendance of the Government nominee Directors in various meetings of the
Board:
Attendance of the Government nominee Directors in the Board
meetings of various government companies was not regular. This suggested a weak
commitment towards the principles of corporate governance.
C. Vacancy position of Directors
- India Tourism Development Corporation Limited and
Indian Petrochemicals Limited did not have a regular CMD from 1 October 1997
and 1 March 2000 respectively. Post of Director (Chemicals) of IBP Company
Limited is lying vacant since 1 May 1994.
- One Post of functional Director of MMTC Limited has
been filled up in October 2001 after remaining vacant for more than 5 years.
Another post also remained vacant in the company from October 2000 to October
2001.
D. Audit Committee
- BHEL had formed a Board level Audit Committee way back
in July 1998 and reconstituted it in August 2000 after amendment of the
Companies Act and as per the listing agreement. It held its last meeting in
August 2000. After this, the Committee did not meet as tenure of both the part
time members of the Audit Committee expired on 14 December 2000. Consequently,
the Audit Committee could not review the annual financial statement of the
Company for the year 2000-2001 before submission to the Board of Directors.
- The Audit Committee of National Fertilizers Limited
and IBP Company Limited did not review adequacy of internal control system and
the irregularities pointed out by the Government / Statutory / Internal
Auditors of the Company.
E. Fraud and Fraud related risks
In respect of Indian Oil Corporation Limited, Rashtriya
Chemicals Fertilizers Limited, Hindustan Organic Chemicals Limited, Shipping
Corporation of India, Audit Committees have not been specifically mandated to
look into fraud and fraud related risks of the Companies.
7.2 Variations between Quarterly Financial Results and
audited accounts of listed PSUs
(i) According to the condition of listing agreement with the
Stock Exchange, every listed Company is required to publish its unaudited
financial results quarterly. Further, as per guidelines of July 1999 of
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), if a listed company prefers to
give audited results within a period of three months of the close of the
accounting year, then unaudited results of last quarter need not be published by
that company.
(ii) In 35 (In respect of Project and Development India
Limited and Madras Fertilisers Limited information is not available) listed Central
Government Companies reviewed by audit, 18 Companies (Dredging Corporation of India, National Mineral Development
Corporation Limited, Steel Authority of India Limited, Kochi Refineries Limited,
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited, Indian Petrochemicals Company Limited,
Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited, HMT Limited, Hindustan Zinc Limited,
Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited, Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited, Gas Authority
of India Limited, Shipping Corporation of India Limited, Bharat Heavy
Electricals Limited, IBP Company Limited, Indian Oil Corporation Limited,
Fertilizers and Travancore Limited, Bongaigaon Refinery and Petrochemicals
Limited) have not published the financial results of last quarter ending March 2001 since
they have finalised their accounts by June 2001. In respect of remaining 17 PSUs,
variations were noticed between the financial results of all the quarters ending
March 2001 and their audited accounts for 2000-2001 as detailed in Appendix -
XIV.
(iii) Significant variations in the profit have been noticed
in Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilisers Limited and India Tourism Development
Corporation Limited. In the case of Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilisers Limited,
profit went down by Rs. 33.50 crore as per audited accounts as against the
figures of quarterly financial statements whereas in the case of India Tourism
Development Corporation Limited, the loss went up by Rs. 6.30 crore in the
audited accounts. The main reasons for variations reported by Rashtriya
Chemicals and Fertilisers Limited were non inclusion of write off of dues
receivable and recovery from the company on account of commercial sale of
ammonia compensated to some extent by subsidy receivable from the Government.
India Tourism Development Corporation Limited attributed the increase in loss to
increase in employees remuneration and wage revision, decrease in interest on
fixed deposits, interest payable to contractors as per arbitration award.
7.3 Market Capitalisation of Shares
(i) A review in audit of prices of shares prevailing in the
stock market in respect of 28 (Excludes nine companies viz., State Trading Corporation, Fertilizers
and Chemicals Travancore Limited, Engineers India Limited, Container Corporation
of India Limited, Kochi Refineries Limited, Chennai Petroleum Corporation
Limited, Jessop and Company Limited, National Mineral Development Corporation
Limited and Hindustan Zinc Limited for which comparable data is not available.\)
Government Companies listed in the various
stock exchanges for which data was available revealed that the total market
value of their equity shares as on 31 March 2001 stood at Rs.86,595.84 crore as
compared to the total book value of Rs.1,00,500.55 crore indicating an erosion
of Rs.13,904.71 crore in value. The total market value of shares in these
companies had came down by Rs.10,461.83 crore as on 31 March 2001 as compared to
their prices as prevailing on 31 March 2000. The details are indicated in the
Appendix XV.
(ii) The market value of shares held by the Government of
India in these companies stood at Rs. 63,336.44 crore as on 31 March 2001 as
compared to the book value of Rs.75,136.23 crore of the Government of India in
these companies as on 31 March 2001 indicating an erosion of Rs.11,799.79 crore
in the value of investment in these companies.
(iii) A further analysis indicated that market capitalisation
was less than one fourth of the book value in Bharat Earth Movers Limited and
less than half in 6 other companies viz., Dredging Corporation of India,
Bongaigaon Refineries and Petrochemicals Limited, Rashtriya Chemicals and
Fertilisers Limited, Neyveli Lignite Corporation Limited, Indian Petrochemicals
Limited and Hindustan Organic Chemicals Limited This was indicative of
unfavourable investors perception in these PSUs.
At the end of the financial year 2000-01, the number of
Public Sector Undertakings under the audit jurisdiction of the C & AG of
India was 368 (including 86 deemed Government Companies). Majority of these had
finalised the accounts within the prescribed time schedule. A review of the
financial statements of 265 PSUs received and reviewed by audit indicated that
overall investment of Government of India in the Public Sector by way of equity
(Rs.79,081 crore) had increased. An additional investment of Rs.9,917 crore was
made during the year towards equity (Rs.5,740 crore) and loan (Rs.4,177 crore)
of the PSUs, despite the fact that the average return from investments in PSUs
continued to be as low as 8.53 percent. Besides, the Government also provided an
amount of Rs.16,394 crore on account of subsidy to the various PSUs operating
under the administered price mechanism. The net burden of these PSUs on the
central budget after taking into account the dividend received from some of the
profit making PSUs was Rs.19,568 crore.
Profits were reported by only 142 PSUs, out of which merely
26 PSUs operating partially under the administered / regulated prices had
contributed 79 percent of the total profit. Losses were reported by as many as
115 PSUs, out of which 93 had eroded their respective equity bases (Rs.12,605
crore) many times over owing to losses accumulating (Rs.54,187 crore as on March
2001) over the years resulting in negative net worth. Sickness had overtaken 61
PSUs and were referred to BIFR.
Inventory control and collection of debts by PSUs continued
to be areas of serious concern. Most of the PSUs continued to rely for their
survival substantially on Government support including supply orders. In the
absence of discernible shift in customer base from Government to non-Government
and export sectors, the desired improvement in the competitiveness of the PSUs
remains to be achieved.
The apparent financial soundness of insurance sector lacked
substance. The profit after tax (2000-01) of Rs.585 crore reported by General
Insurance Corporation of India and its four subsidiaries should be viewed along
with the fact that during the year these companies had incurred a loss of
Rs.1,722 crore on underwriting risks which is their core business. It was the
income from investment activities and rent etc. which helped these companies in
holding on to their bottom lines.
The market value of shares of 28 listed Government Companies
as per prices prevailing in stock markets on 31 March 2001 stood at Rs.
86,595.84 crore. This was not compared favourably with the total book value of
their shares Rs.1,00,500.55 crore. Consequently, market value of shares held by
Government of India in these companies stood at Rs.63,336.44 crore as on 31
March 2001 as compared with the book value of Rs.75,136.23 crore indicating a
decrease of Rs.11,799.79 crore in the value of investment in these companies.
New Delhi
Dated: 26 Feb 2002
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(T.S. NARASIMHAN)
Deputy Comptroller and Auditor General
cum Chairman, Audit Board
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Countersigned
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New Delhi
Dated: 26 Feb 2002
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(V.K. SHUNGLU)
Comptroller and Auditor General of India |
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