ADVERTISEMENT

Fortis Healthcare Board To Consider Fundraising On Friday

Fortis plans to raise funds on preferential basis, quantum likely to be disclosed coming Friday.

A Fortis Healthcare Renkare dialysis clinic stands in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)
A Fortis Healthcare Renkare dialysis clinic stands in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

Cash-strapped Fortis Healthcare Ltd., which is in the process of finding a new investor, today said its board will meet on Friday to consider raising funds through issue of securities on a preferential allotment basis.

Fortis had received binding bids from Malaysia’s IHH Healthcare and Manipal-TPG combine on July 3, the last day of submission of fresh round of bids called by a newly constituted board. Munjals-Burmans combine, which had earlier emerged as the preferred suitor for Fortis Healthcare, and Radiant Life Care, however, had backed out.

In a regulatory filing today, the company said its board would meet on July 13 “to consider, and if thought fit approve raising funds through issue of securities on a preferential allotment basis”. It did not, however, disclose details of the quantum of funds to be raised.

Opinion
Wanted: A Nurse for Fortis Who Won’t Kill It

For months, the troubled healthcare chain has been trying to find a new investor, and on two separate instances it had accepted offers from Manipal-TPG combine and Munjals-Burmans combine only to scrap it and go in for fresh bidding.

As per the new criteria, that was put up by the company’s board on May 29, the potential buyer had to make a minimum investment of Rs 1,500 crore into Fortis by way of preferential allotment. Apart from having a plan for funding the acquisition of RHT Health Trust, suitors should also have a plan for providing exit to private equity investors of diagnostic arm SRL.

The backing out of Munjals-Burmans combine and Radiant Life happened days after Fortis announced that it has initiated legal action to recover about Rs 500 crore of funds given as inter-corporate deposits to the firms controlled by former promoters Malvinder and Shivinder Singh.

The loans were given without board approval and enough collateral. The company had also stated that market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India has ordered a forensic probe into the company's matters. On May 22, the company’s shareholders voted out Brian Tempest from the board of directors in an extraordinary general meeting. He was among four directors of the company whose removals were sought by two institutional investors.

Opinion
Fortis Board Can’t Determine If Fraud Happened, Auditor Says

Three directors - Harpal Singh, Sabina Vaisoha and Tejinder Singh Shergill- had resigned before the EGM. On the other hand the shareholders had voted in favour of appointments of Suvalaxmi Chakraborty, Ravi Rajagopal and lndrajit Banerjee as independent directors on the board.