People
Figures converted from INR at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
The People Running This Company
Governance grade: C- because Vedanta has capable operators and real promoter ownership, but the same control chain also creates recurring related-party, brand-fee, and parent-debt service risks for minority shareholders.
Governance Grade C-
Promoter Holding
Formal Board Independence
Skin-In-The-Game Score
Control Risk Score
Operating Depth
Finance Execution
Succession Clarity
The operating bench is stronger than the governance optics. Deshnee Naidoo, Ajay Goel, and Arun Misra add real resource-sector and finance capability, but the board and capital-allocation system still orbit the promoter family.
What They Get Paid
FY2025 pay is not excessive for a company of Vedanta's size, but the largest direct pay is concentrated in the promoter-family executive seat, while another key executive is paid by HZL and also receives Vedanta options.
The pay structure is understandable but not clean. Navin Agarwal's $2.75M direct pay is performance-heavy and not outlandish relative to Vedanta's scale, yet the family executive receives most of the disclosed Vedanta director remuneration; Arun Misra's economically relevant $1.58M HZL pay sits outside the Vedanta table even though he is a Vedanta executive director.
Are They Aligned?
Promoter ownership is high enough to create economic exposure, but falling promoter shareholding, encumbrance history, and recurring cash movements to the parent make this control structure only partially aligned.
Skin-In-The-Game Score
Recent Insider Buys
Recent Insider Sells
2021 RPT Warning ($M)
The cleanest positive is that promoters still own 56.38%. The offset is that promoter holding fell from 68.11% in June 2023, nearly all promoter shares have been subject to encumbrance disclosures at points, FY2025 included $315.7M of management and brand fees paid to controlling/fellow entities, and SEBI previously warned Vedanta over $192.2M of related-party transactions without prior audit committee approval.
Capital allocation is shareholder-friendly only on the surface. High dividends benefit minorities, but management also says Vedanta Resources can be managed through routine brand fees and 4% to 5% dividend flows; that means minority holders share the economics of a structure designed partly around parent-level debt service.
Board Quality
The board has enough formal independence and added regulatory expertise in 2026, but the real test is whether those directors can constrain promoter-linked capital allocation rather than simply validate it.
The best change is the addition of former SEBI and RBI senior officials to the board. The unresolved issue is committee effectiveness: the Audit & Risk Management Committee is described as independent and unanimously approved current RPTs, yet the company's history includes a SEBI warning for delayed audit committee approval on a large related-party transaction.
The Verdict
Governance Grade C-
Alignment Score
Promoter Ownership
Formal Independence
Verdict: C-. Upgrade requires sustained deleveraging at the parent without new encumbrance pressure, cleaner disclosure around brand fees and related-party flows, and independent directors visibly pushing back on capital allocation. Downgrade comes if promoter financing again constrains Vedanta assets, if Serentica or other related-party allegations become substantiated, or if demerger entities inherit opaque cash-extraction mechanics.
The strongest positives are promoter ownership, a serious operating bench, and new regulatory/risk expertise on the board. The real concerns are economic rather than cosmetic: parent funding needs, recurring brand fees, large related-party approvals, and past process failures around audit committee approval.