This story is from October 18, 2023

Board seat: Mukesh Ambani’s son faces pushback

Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) has advised shareholders to vote against the appointment of Mukesh Ambani's youngest son, Anant Ambani, to the board of Reliance Industries. ISS cited concerns over Anant's limited leadership experience as the reason for its recommendation. This echoes the views of another advisory firm, Institutional Investor Advisory Services (IIAS), which also objected to Anant's appointment. The board appointments will be decided by a shareholder vote on October 26.
Youngest Ambani, Anant faces proxy firms' resistance to board seat: Report
Anant Ambani (File photo)
Institutional Shareholder Services, an international proxy advisory firm, has recommended that shareholders vote against the proposal to appoint billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s youngest son, Anant Ambani, on the board of the family-controlled Reliance Industries, underscoring concerns around succession planning at India’s largest company by market value.

“A vote against this resolution is warranted as Anant Ambani’s limited leadership/board experience of around six years raises concerns on his potential contribution to the board,” ISS said in an October 12 note, which it shared with Bloomberg. It has backed the board appointments of his twin-elder siblings, Isha and Akash Ambani, both 31 in the shareholder vote that will close on October 26. Anant is 28 years old.
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ISS’s objections echo the recommendations from Mumbai-based Institutional Investor Advisory Services, or IIAS, which said in an October 9 report, that “at 28 years of age”, appointment of the young Ambani scion “does not align with our voting guidelines”. IIAS has supported the proposals seeking to elect Isha and Akash.
Reliance did not respond to Bloomberg’s queries but told the proxy companies that Anant has “the relevant experience and maturity to add value to the board deliberations” given his participation in the conglomerate’s businesses and the grooming he has received from senior leadership over the years. Both ISS and IIAS added Reliance’s response to their reports.
Another international proxy firm, Glass Lewis, is in favour of Anant’s appointment. “We do not single out Anant Ambani from the other siblings based on experience,” Decky Windarto, Glass Lewis’s director of Asia-Pacific research, said in an emailed response. “We noted that the other two directors up for election are just three years older than Anant, with similar professional experiences.”

While the induction of Anant and his siblings as nonexecutive, non-independent directors is critical to the succession plan announced by Asia’s richest person, the co unterpoints from proxy advisories show that Ambani and the “next-generation” leaders at the $190-billion group will continue to be in focus for corporate governance watchers.
The recommendations from ISS and IIAS also point to the evolving investor expectations from a conglomerate that now counts Google and Meta among marquee investors in its consumer businesses.Reliance’s founders own over 41% shares in the company, making them the single-largest voting chunk. The three resolutions need a majority of votes cast to go through. Foreign and local institutions, that often vote based on proxy firms’ recommendations, own close to 40% in Reliance.
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