People
The People Running This Company
Governance grade is B- — a once-fraudulent bank has been rebuilt under RBI's reconstruction scheme into a structurally clean, board-independent, professionally-managed institution, but a live SEBI insider-trading probe tied to the 2022 Carlyle/Advent deal and a fresh EOW investigation into loan-assignment funding keep the tail risk real.
The People Running This Company
Board Size
Independent Directors
Promoter Holding (%)
Employees
Yes Bank has had three CEOs in seven years — founder Rana Kapoor (forced out 2019, later jailed), reconstruction-era turnaround CEO Prashant Kumar (March 2020 – April 5, 2026), and now Vinay M. Tonse (from April 6, 2026). The current top team is dominated by ex-PSU bankers and SBI alumni — a deliberate institutional choice after the founder-era collapse, but one that creates dependency on a small group of public-sector veterans.
Key-person risk on Day 35. Vinay Tonse has been CEO for roughly five weeks as of report date and is on his first earnings call. He is an SBI lifer parachuted in — credible, but unproven outside a state-owned institution. Three-year RBI-approved term gives runway, but execution risk on the 1% ROA target is concentrated in one person who hasn't run a private bank before.
What They Get Paid
Sensible, post-scandal-era pay. Prashant Kumar's all-in FY25 package of ~₹49.3M (~$577K equivalent) is modest for a ₹70,000 crore-market-cap bank — Simply Wall St benchmarks it at about 70% of Indian large-cap peer median. The pay structure has three good features designed in by RBI after 2020: (1) 30% of CTC is now variable (was 100% fixed pre-crisis), (2) 50% of cash bonus is deferred over 3 years with explicit malus/clawback, (3) ESOPs valued via Black-Scholes are the only equity grant — no founder stock. Independent director pay tops out at ₹7.4M for Atul Malik (Audit/Risk-heavy committee load), which is unremarkable. Nominee directors representing SBI take normal sitting fees; nominees from CA Basque/Verventa (PE shareholders) waived all fees during their tenure — a clean signal.
The compensation structure is one of the cleanest things at this bank. Variable pay is tied to ROA, asset quality and PSL compliance; deferral and clawback are real (not boilerplate); RBI approves CEO/ED pay individually. There is no related-party pay leakage and no excess fees to outside directors.
Are They Aligned?
This is the central question for Yes Bank. The answer: alignment runs through institutional shareholders, not management equity. No one in the C-suite holds a meaningful personal stake.
Promoter Stake (%)
FII Stake (%)
DII Stake (%)
Shareholders
The September 2025 inflection point. In one quarter, FII holding jumped from 25% to 45% as Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) acquired ~20% in a ₹13,483 crore deal, becoming the largest single shareholder. SBI tendered a large block in the same transaction, dropping DII ownership from 40% to 21%. Carlyle and Advent (each ~10%, acquired Dec 2022 for ₹8,900 crore combined) are also still on the register. The shareholder base has effectively been re-anchored from a state-rescue consortium to a foreign-strategic + PE structure — and SMBC, with one nominee director (Rajeev Veeravalli Kannan), now has the strongest single voice in the room.
Skin-in-the-Game Score (out of 10)
Insider Ownership (%)
Skin-in-the-game: 3 / 10. Management has no founder stake and no meaningful equity ownership. Alignment depends entirely on (a) the bonus deferral / malus regime, (b) ESOP grants vesting over time, and (c) institutional shareholder oversight from SMBC, SBI, Carlyle and Advent. That oversight is real and concentrated — but the executives themselves do not eat their own cooking. For a turnaround bank trading near book value, that is a meaningful gap.
Board Quality
Strengths. Seven of 13 directors are formally independent; all key committees (Audit, Risk, N&R) are chaired by independents; the Chairman is a former RBI Deputy Governor; the Audit Committee held four one-to-one meetings with statutory auditors without management present during FY25; and the Risk Committee meets the CRO alone quarterly. RBI-vetted appointments mean every director has passed a fit-and-proper test. Joint statutory auditors (G.M. Kapadia & CNK Associates) rotate per RBI's mandate — no qualifications in the FY25 audit report.
Weakness: thin tech / cyber / digital banking expertise. Only one director (Nandita Gurjar, ex-Infosys HR) brings deep tech credentials — yet Yes Bank operates a digital payments business with UPI scale and just lost depositor data via a Multi-Currency Prepaid Forex Card breach (February 2026). The board has more banking and regulatory veterans than it needs and too few cybersecurity / digital risk specialists for the kind of bank Yes Bank is becoming.
Live SEBI insider-trading case (March 2026). 16 of 19 individuals named in SEBI's show-cause notice are expected to settle; 3 are contesting. The notice alleges a former YBL board member and audit committee member shared UPSI on the Carlyle/Advent ₹8,900 crore deal (Dec 2021 – Jul 2022) with friends who traded ahead. Carlyle and Advent executives, plus EY and PwC partners, are also named. Even if every YBL person settles, this exposes a real weakness in information firewalls during the Kumar era — and creates a precedent for monitoring SMBC-deal-related trading going forward.
The Verdict
Governance Grade: B-
Governance Score (out of 10)
Verdict: B-. Yes Bank's governance has been rebuilt from the ground up under RBI's 2020 Reconstruction Scheme. The board is genuinely independent, the audit and risk apparatus is robust, executive pay is sensibly capped with real deferral and clawback, and the shareholder register has just consolidated around a strategic foreign bank (SMBC) and credible PE (Carlyle, Advent). The new CEO is an SBI veteran with RBI approval and a three-year mandate.
The positives that matter most: zero promoter / family overhang; clean compensation with malus/clawback that actually works; no material related-party leakage; auditors with no qualifications; SMBC's 20% stake provides strategic-investor oversight that didn't exist before.
The real concerns: (1) an active SEBI insider-trading probe stemming from the 2022 PE deal directly implicates a former director and the bank's information-control culture; (2) management has minimal personal equity — alignment is structural, not economic; (3) a fresh EOW investigation into "closed-loop funding" in YES Bank's loan assignments to Suraksha ARC (Feb 2026) plus a forex-card breach (Feb 2026) show operational and compliance risk is still elevated; (4) the board lacks deep digital/cyber expertise for a bank whose growth story is increasingly digital.
What would upgrade this to a B+: (a) clean closure of the SEBI insider-trading matter without further individuals from the current board/management being named, (b) visible insider buying by Tonse or other KMP in the first 12 months, and (c) the addition of one or two directors with deep cybersecurity / fintech experience.
What would downgrade this to a C: (a) new YBL executives named in any expanded SEBI/EOW probe, (b) a related-party transaction with SMBC that proves non-arm's-length, or (c) RBI extension of Tonse's tenure being denied at the three-year mark.