Resignation and after – The HinduBusinessLine

Clipped from: https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/editorial/resignation-and-after/article70765864.ece

Chakraborty could’ve done better

HDFC Bank’s challneg now is to restore the narative of stability | Photo Credit: Dado Ruvic

The sudden resignation of Atanu Chakraborty as part-time chairman of HDFC Bank has raised more questions than it has answered, and in a way that does not serve the interests of shareholders, depositors, or the financial system. In his resignation note, Chakraborty cited concerns around “ethical” and “governance” issues within the bank. They are loaded terms, capable of shaking investor confidence and triggering systemic anxiety. Yet, he chose not to elaborate. If there were indeed such issues, a chairman’s responsibility is to ensure they are addressed through the proper regulatory channels. It is unclear whether he flagged these issues with the regulator and the bank’s board.

The Reserve Bank of India stepped in to reassure stakeholders, stating that the bank remains fundamentally strong. This swift intervention suggests that the regulator saw no immediate “ethical” red flag that would justify a sudden loss of confidence. The bank’s management, too, sought to contain the fallout, suggesting that the resignation may have stemmed from differences with senior leadership rather than any substantive ethical breach. This divergence between what was said and what was later clarified is precisely the problem. If Chakraborty’s exit was indeed due to differences in approach or perspective with the executive team, invoking ethical and governance concerns was not just imprecise; it was injudicious. Words matter, particularly when they come from a distinguished personality entrusted with oversight of one of India’s largest financial institutions. The chairman’s communication is not a personal note; it is a market-moving statement.

Conversely, if there were governance issues serious enough to warrant resignation, the lack of disclosure is equally troubling. Stakeholders have a right to know. This episode underscores a deeper concern about leadership accountability in large corporations. The responsibility of those at the helm does not end with making decisions; it extends to how those decisions are communicated. In banking, where depositor confidence underpins the entire system, even unintended signals can have disproportionate consequences.

Chakraborty, given his experience as a former bureaucrat and regulator, would have been acutely aware of this dynamic. A more measured articulation, clearly distinguishing between governance concerns and managerial disagreements, could have prevented unnecessary erosion of shareholder value. The HDFC scrip fell sharply, due to perceptions shaped by incomplete communication. Ultimately, trust in banking is built not just on balance sheets, but on the conduct of key management personnel. Board members and chairmen must realise that their primary allegiance is to the institution and its stakeholders, not to themselves. If an ethical line has been crossed, it must be reported and rectified with evidence. For HDFC Bank, the challenge now lies in restoring the narrative of stability that this clumsy exit has so needlessly disrupted.

Published on March 20, 2026

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