Infosys founder Narayana Murthy on Tuesday defended his role in a months-long war of words with the company’s board that led to changes at the top, saying his actions were in the interest of shareholders.
Speaking to investors on a conference call, Murthy said he hoped the company’s management would rally behind Nandan Nilekani, a co-founder and a former Infosys CEO, who was named as non-executive chairman last week.
Vishal Sikka, the first CEO of Infosys drawn from outside its founders, resigned this month, blaming Murthy for creating an “untenable atmosphere”.
Sikka’s sudden exit sparked a sell-off that wiped billions of dollars off Infosys’s market value, forcing India’s No. 2 IT services firm to reshuffle its board and bring back Nilekani.
On Tuesday, Murthy reiterated concerns about the previous board’s corporate governance practices, including the “excessive” severance paid to a former finance chief, but expressed hope that things would take a turn for the better under Nilekani’s leadership.
“In fact, based on Nandan’s media interviews and the recent changes in the board, I believe that corrective actions have already begun,” Murthy said.
The return of Nilekani, who is credited with quadrupling Infosys’ revenue to $2 billion, has cheered investors – he is widely expected to end the board’s row with founder executives, help clients and boost employee morale.
Nilekani told investors last week his priorities were to find a CEO, reconstitute the board and shape future strategy.
Source: cnbc china
Founder of Indian tech giant Infosys defends role in boardroom feud