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HomeEconomyIndiGo hits turbulence as tussle between top bosses hurts company shares

IndiGo hits turbulence as tussle between top bosses hurts company shares

IndiGo operator InterGlobe's shares tumbled as much as 19% amid concerns that a power struggle between co-founders Rakesh Gangwal and Rahul Bhatia will become prolonged.

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New Delhi: A feud atop Asia’s biggest budget airline by market value deepened after one of its co-founders accused the other of dubious governance practices, roiling the company’s shares and raising concerns that the dispute will drag on.

Billionaire Rakesh Gangwal informed IndiGo’s operator, InterGlobe Aviation Ltd., that he flagged some of his governance concerns about co-founder Rahul Bhatia to the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the company said in a statement late Tuesday. That prompted queries from the regulator, which InterGlobe will respond to by July 19, it said.

The complaints centered on what Gangwal described as “unusual controlling rights” held by Bhatia, who couldn’t be reached for comment by Bloomberg. That level of power paved the way for Bhatia to push through related-party transactions and major decisions without proper safeguards or protocols, according to Gangwal.

InterGlobe shares tumbled as much as 19% amid concerns that the power struggle will become prolonged and cause collateral damage to the company. It also comes at a bad time as Indian carriers struggle to stay in business amid higher oil prices and cut-throat competition.


Also read: IndiGo founders have differences only over ‘one issue’


“With the conflict between the two promoters coming out in the public in great detail, we do not envisage a settlement anytime soon,” Citigroup analyst Arvind Sharma said in a note to clients, reiterating his recommendation to sell InterGlobe Aviation shares. “The uncertainty regarding the final resolution could cause weakness in the stock price.”

An IndiGo spokeswoman declined to comment beyond the stock exchange statement.

InterGlobe traded at 1,368 rupees, down 13%, at 10:30 a.m. in Mumbai and was headed for its biggest drop since 2016.

In his letter to the regulator, Gangwal said the company is at a “watershed moment” and that it’s started “veering off from the core principles and values of governance that made IndiGo what it is today.”

Gangwal, who has said he had no desire to take control of the airline, also wrote in his letter to the regulator that Bhatia is “building an ecosystem” of companies for related-party transactions. He also criticized how Bhatia’s control over the board allowed him to push through decisions “without basic governance protocols and laws being followed.”

“These unusual controlling rights seem to be the basis for the various violations of law and governance at IndiGo,” Gangwal said in his letter. “The nation can ill afford IndiGo to ever falter.”

Although Gangwal and Bhatia are board members at InterGlobe, neither holds executive positions at the company. Still, Bhatia’s holding company is the top shareholder.

The pair has always been an odd couple. Gangwal, once the chief executive officer at US Airways, teamed up with Bhatia — a former airline sales agent — to create in 2005. After its founding, the carrier quickly outpaced rivals to grab almost half of the local market, making both founders billionaires. IndiGo is now one of the few Indian carriers with enough cash to aggressively expand, and it’s been mapping out a way to build a long-haul, low-cost business to take passengers from places like New Delhi to London.

But those expansion plans could be at threat should the feud escalate.

“This board level feud is an unnecessary distraction for IndiGo, which is best placed to benefit from upheaval in the Indian aviation market,” said Rahul Kapoor, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence in Singapore. “Even as we do not expect any operational or earnings impact, investors will be closely scrutinizing the related-party transactions and seek greater clarity on future strategy.” – Bloomberg


Also read: Low-cost king IndiGo is coming for Emirates


 

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SourceBloomberg

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