To safeguard the interest of investors and creditors in the wake of a Rs 5,600-crore payment crisis at NSEL, the Corporate Affairs Ministry last year proposed a merger of the spot exchange with Financial Technologies India Ltd (FTIL).
The draft order for the merger has, however, been opposed by FTIL.
"...The proposed forced amalgamation of NSEL with FTIL through an administrative order... Would set a very dangerous precedent in the domestic corporate sector, as it ignores valuable rights granted under law to the various stakeholders of a company," Assocham said in a letter to Minister of Finance and Corporate Affairs Arun Jaitley.
"It will destroy the concept of "limited liability" which is the fundamental principle of corporate jurisprudence," Assocham said, while claiming that the merger would adversely affect over 63000 shareholders and more than 1,000 employees at FTIL.
More From This Section
Asking the government to reconsider the draft merger order, Assocham said that the proposed amalgamation would have far-reaching ramification for all Indian companies and global investors.
Meanwhile, Corporate Affairs Ministry yesterday finalised the share swap ratio for the proposed merger of crisis-hit NSEL with its parent Financial Technologies, which itself will not get any share.