RISK MANAGEMENT CONCLAVE 2019
Host: Institute Of Risk Management, UK & ITI Edvest
Association
Partner: IMC Chamber of Commerce & Industry
by Samiksha
A Risk Management
Conclave was organized by The Institute of Risk Management, UK along with its
India Partner – ITI EdVest, in association with IMC Chamber of Commerce and
Industry. The conclave was supported by industry stalwarts who came together as panelists to discuss and deliberate on the
increasing importance of risk management and its education in India. With the
challenges being faced by Indian businesses, rise in corporate governance
issues, disruption in traditional business models and volatility in the Indian
economy, risk management has gained a lot of traction.
(Panelists: Amit Tandon, Founder, IiAS, Neeta Mukerji, Chief
Credit Officer, RBL Bank, Dhanpal Jhaveri, Managing Partner, Everstone Capital
& Chairman – Corporate Governance & Sustainability Committee at IMC
Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Sudhir Valia, largest shareholder, The Investment Trust of
India Limited and Shailesh Haribhakti, Non-Executive Chairman, L&T
Financial Services)
India is home to the third largest
family businesses in the world but 43% do not have a succession plan in place.
We have advanced significantly in terms of technology using AI, machine
learning, big data but over 76% of Indian businesses are vulnerable to cyber-attacks.
According to a professor from Yale School of Management, the average life span
of an S&P company has dropped from 67 years in 1920 to 15 years today and
even predicted that 75% of the S&P 500 firms will be replaced by new firms
in 2027.
“India is perhaps the only country in
the world that has mandated a Risk Management Committee of the Board, apart
from Audit Committee and Compliance Committee and these 3 committees are very
distinctly managed for keeping an organisation safe and sustainable” said
Shailesh Haribhakti.
“Focus on the risk management process
is of paramount importance”, said Amit Tandon. Recently, regulators in India
have emphasized on the need of a well-defined risk management structure to
ensure more transparency from corporate governance point of view and also
prudent decision making for smooth functioning of businesses. Mr. Sudhir Valia
added “Risks emanate from the shop floor and they should be resolved by the
risk owners itself, because once these risks travel to the board room, the
impact cannot be reduced to a desired level.”
It was discussed, that risk management
is not only about managing financial risks or compliance risks but also taking
a holistic approach towards enterprise wide risk management. “Good risk
managers should be good at history because those who don’t learn from history
will be doomed to repeat it” said Neeta Mukerji.
Today’s initiative by IMC is to apprise all
professionals here on how to identify risks and manage them even before they affect
the business functioning. This will strengthen companies and enable them to
take future business decisions effectually. Their knowledge of identifying
risks on time, will pan out their options to deal with risks on a timely and
effective way, thus helping in achieving
its primary objective while keeping all other risks under control said Ashish Vaid, President, IMC.
One key message that was driven from
the conclave was that Risk Management
will be the driving force behind tackling business failures, improving
stakeholder confidence and most importantly, creating a culture of risk based
decision making across organisations. From an investment risk perspective,
Dhanpal Jhaveri said, “Investing is like a two faced coin – there is always a
return on one side and risk on the other side and as investors we are also
custodians of others capital so asking the right questions before investing is
very crucial.”
At the conclave, The Institute of Risk
Management – UK also announced their entry into India in collaboration with ITI
EdVest (the education initiative of The Investment Trust of India Limited) to
introduce their suite of professional enterprise risk qualifications for
students, entrepreneurs and working professionals with an objective of
nurturing the next generation of risk thinking leaders in India. “Having
trained business risk management to over 500 students through a unique
experiential and practical approach, I believe that risk management is as
important as financial literacy and there is a need to integrate this with our
education system such that India’s SMEs, family businesses, startups and large
corporate organisations continue to grow with stability and the right risk
response strategy to reduce the impact of risks”, said Hersh Shah, India
Affiliate Partner of IRM UK.
IRM qualifications will be available
through ITI EdVest’s empanelled education institutions and corporate partners and
they will also be announcing open enrolment programs at select cities across
India. For more information, one can contact their India Affiliate – ITI
EdVest.
“India as a country has huge potential
and we see a huge demand for enterprise risk professionals across industries
including financial services. With IRM qualifications now available in India
through ITI EdVest, we are confident about bridging the demand-supply gap and
developing a large pool of qualified enterprise risk professionals”, added
Sanjay Himatsingani, Director of Training & Development, Institute of Risk
Management, UK.
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