FPJ Chairman: Robust Reporting Drives Corporate Governance Excellence
In a call to elevate standards, Free Press Journal Chairman Abhishek Karnani asserted that strong annual reporting practices significantly enhance transparency and nurture a progressive corporate...

In a call to elevate standards, Free Press Journal Chairman Abhishek Karnani asserted that strong annual reporting practices significantly enhance transparency and nurture a progressive corporate culture across India's business sector. At the glamorous fourth installment of the FPJ-CAREEdge Annual Report Awards in Mumbai, Karnani painted a vision of this platform evolving into a premier think tank for corporate governance. "Here, we will engage in meaningful dialogues on accountability and operational excellence," he stated. Transparency has been the cornerstone of FPJ's ascent, Karnani revealed. Now Mumbai's second-biggest English daily with ABC-certified circulation—the only one of its kind—this publication exemplifies the very principles it champions. The gathering attracted an elite audience of industry titans, regulators, investors, and ESG specialists, all united to honor superior corporate disclosures. Discussions spotlighted how modern annual reports reveal far more than numbers: they showcase strategic acumen, sustainability commitments, and governance maturity. Swati Agarwal from CARE Analytics stressed the shift: annual reports now integrate environmental impacts, social responsibilities, governance frameworks, and resilience against climate risks, focusing on holistic value generation. The evening's pinnacle was the Hall of Fame recognition for Bhaskar Bhat. His stewardship at Titan built a legacy of trust-based branding, now extending to his role at Kansai Nerolac Paints. Winners from diverse industries were feted for exemplary reporting. Insightful panels with Ramdev Agrawal and Rama Bijapurkar unpacked trends in consumer shifts, investment horizons, and the transforming Indian corporate fabric. This event signals a maturing corporate India, where transparent reporting isn't optional—it's the bedrock of sustainable success and stakeholder trust.
