No other bank in the country has almost its entire top brass so closely associated with its helmsman throughout the larger part of their careers.
The
contest to succeed Romesh Sobti at IndusInd Bank has got a little
more interesting with the lender considering Rajiv Sabharwal of Tata
Capital as a probable candidate.
It
is now a two-way race between Sabharwal, Tata Capital’s managing
director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO), and Sumant
Kathpalia, head of consumer banking at the Hindujas-promoted bank,
according to sources in the know.
This
is probably the first instance where the chief of a non-banking
financial company (NBFC) is being considered for the corner office at
a bank. When contacted, Tata Capital said: “The information is
completely untrue.” Sobti’s term as MD and CEO of IndusInd Bank
will end on March 23.
Outsiders
have moved into the corner offices in two private sector banks —
Amitabh Chaudhry from HDFC Life Insurance succeeded Shikha Sharma at
Axis Bank, and Ravneet Gill from Deutsche Bank came into YES Bank
after Rana Kapoor’s removal. Sandeep Bakhshi, who replaced Chanda
Kochhar as ICICI Bank MD and CEO, was chief operating officer at the
bank, and an ICICI group veteran of over three decades.
IndusInd
Bank, however, doesn’t face any of the issues that cropped up
ahead of the baton change at ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, and YES Bank. It
is surmised that the central bank may not necessarily plump for
continuity by way of an “insider”.
No
other bank in the country has almost its entire top brass so closely
associated with its helmsman throughout the larger part of their
careers. And it was always speculated that it is not certain if the
team will hold together in case one among them was to step into
Sobti’s shoes.
This
concern was flagged in 2014 by analysts when Sobti’s tenure was
extended by a year (the retirement age for the heads of private banks
was 65 then). A year’s extension was given as then in-the-works P J
Nayak Committee on governance in banks had initially deliberated on
65 as the age limit for bank CEOs. It was later decided to go by the
Companies Act and the limit was extended to 70.
The
RBI expects private banks to put in place a succession plan well in
advance so that there is adequate time for the identified successor
to settle down – be it an internal or external candidate. In the
case of both Sobti and Puri, the year gone by has been about whether
the central bank would align the age limit for directors in private
bank boards to 75 from 70 to bring it in alignment with the Companies
Act (2013). It did not budge, and wanted fresh talent to come in.
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