Controlling stake in Satyam up for grabs

Enough to save the outsourcer?

By Colin Barker, 9 March 2009 16:38

NEWS

Satyam Computer Services confirmed on Monday that it would put 51 per cent of its business up for sale.

The company is hoping the move will finally quell any doubts over its future. There has been speculation over the future of the company since January, when B Ramalinga Raju quit as chairman after it emerged the company had been logging non-existent cash and interest on its balance sheet.

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The company is one of the world's largest outsourcers. In October, Satyam said it believed it would have achieved close to £1bn worth of outsourcing business in the UK during 2008.

In a statement published on Monday, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) said it had relaxed restrictions on the minimum sale price to encourage bidding for a majority shareholding in Satyam. The government is hoping the sale of a controlling stake in the company, which has lost around 80 per cent of its market value since January, will restore confidence in Satyam's future, the Sebi said in the statement.

"There is no requirement to have a minimum floor price that is otherwise required under Indian law in connection with the initial subscription," the Sebi's statement read.

The company's new chief executive, AS Murty, who was appointed in February, said at the time he was confident he and the board could "accomplish the impossible" and "address the interests of all stakeholders".

Satyam employs 53,000 staff in 66 countries, and counts 185 Fortune 500 companies among its customers.

Any companies with an interest in acquiring the majority shareholding must register that interest by 12 March.

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