Shikha Sharma's tenure curtailed, to step down as Axis Bank chief on Dec 31

Press Trust of India  |  Mumbai 

The board has curtailed the fourth term of its and Managing Director to seven months following an unusual request from her that she be relieved on December 2018, 29 months ahead of the scheduled term.

The board's decision come amidst RBI raising questions over her re-appointment for the fourth term as MD and of the third largest in the wake of mounting non-performing assets (NPAs).

Sharma, who would complete her third term on May 31, 2018, has been heading the since 2009.

The board accepted her request for a shorter seven-month term (from June 1 to December 31, 2018), subject to the approval of the of India (RBI), the said in a regulatory filing.

The said on December 8 last year, the board had decided to reappoint Sharma as the Managing Director and CEO, for a period of three years with effect from June 1, 2018, subject to receipt of requisite approvals.

The re-appointment, however, was yet to get the approval of the of India (RBI).

"In this connection kindly note that Shikha Sharma, Managing Director & of the has requested the Board to reconsider the period of her re-appointment as the Managing Director and of the to be revised from June 1, 2018 up to December 31, 2018," it said.

The filing did not elaborate why Sharma wanted her fourth term to be curtailed to seven months from three years.

The board, the filing said, has "accepted" her said request, subject to the approval of the RBI.

According to sources said the of India (RBI) has shot off a letter to the of Sanjiv Misra, who is also a former Expenditure Secretary, with regard to the board's decision to re-appoint Sharma.

The RBI's letter has also cited the bank's performance and deteriorating asset quality condition over the years.

In July 2017, the board of had approved re-appointment of Sharma. Her new term will start from June 2018.

As per regulations, appointments of top management personnel at require clearance from the RBI.

The private sector lender's NPAs jumped by over five-fold in recent financial years.

The gross NPAs worth Rs 4,110 crore at the end of March 2015 surged to Rs 21,280 crore at the end of March 2017. During the same period, the lender's net profit halved from Rs 7,357.8 crore to Rs 3,679.2 crore.

Recently, the RBI had also penalised the for incorrectly reporting bad loans. The asset-class divergence uncovered by the RBI was Rs 9,480 crore in 2015-16 and Rs 5,633 crore in 2016-17.

Laden with infrastructure loans, the has struggled to contain NPAs.

During demonetisation, was in the for alleged involvement of its staff for suspected money laundering activities and illegal note conversions. had conducted several raids and arrested few of its employees for indulging in illegal activities during the note ban initiated on November 8, 2016.

Last year, market regulator Sebi also ordered to strengthen its systems and conduct an internal probe to fix responsibility as the initial investigation showed the leakage of price sensitive financial information was due to "inadequacy" of processes at the in the leak case.

The bank's results for the April-June 2017 quarter were "either identical or matched closely with the figures" that were in circulation on prior to an official announcement, Sebi had noted in its order.

Sebi's move followed a probe initiated after reports about Unpublished Price Sensitive Information (UPSI) being circulated in various private groups about certain companies, including Axis Bank, ahead of their official announcements.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 09 2018. 21:25 IST