What is the Satyam scam about?
It is about corporate governance and fraudulent auditing
practices allegedly in connivance with auditors and chartered accountants. The
company misrepresented its accounts both to its board, stock exchanges,
regulators, investors and all other stakeholders.
Is this an accounting fraud, a market manipulation/fraud or both?
It is a fraud, which misled the market and other stakeholders by
lying about the company’s financial health. Even basic facts such as revenues,
operating profits, interest liabilities and cash balances were grossly inflated
to show the company in good health.
Who is to blame here? The promoters?
The promoters are primary culprits, although it is almost
impossible to misrepresent such facts without the connivance of the auditors
and some executive board members. Independent directors, it seems, were kept in
the dark about the actual books of accounts.
What about the auditors?
The role of external third party auditors, who were tasked to
ensure that no financial bungling is undertaken to carry out promoters’
interest or hide facts, have also been brought to question.
Anatomy of a fraud
1. Maintaining records
· Raju maintained thorough details of the Satyam's accounts and minutes of meetings since 2002.
· Raju maintained thorough details of the Satyam's accounts and minutes of meetings since 2002.
· Raju stored records of accounts for the
latest year (2008-09) in a computer server called "My Home Hub."
2. Fake invoices and bills
· Details of accounts from 2002 till January 7, 2009 – the day Raju came out with his dramatic, five-page confession - were stored in two separate Internet Protocol (IP) addresses.
· Fake invoices and bills were created using software
applications such as 'Ontime' that was used for calculating hours put in by an
employee
· A secret programme was allegedly planted in the source code of
the official invoice management system creating a user id 'Super User' with the
power to hide or show the invoices in the system.
3. Web of companies
· A web of 356 investment companies was used to allegedly divert
funds from Satyam.
· These companies had several transactions in the form of
inter-corporate investments, advances and loans within and among them.
· One such company, with a paid up capital of Rs 5 lakh, had
made an investment of Rs 90.25 crore and received unsecured loans of Rs 600 crore.
4. Why did he need the money
· The cash so raised was used to purchase
several thousands of acres of land across Andhra Pradesh to ride a booming
realty market.
· It presented a growing problem as facts had
to be doctored to keep showing healthy profits for Satyam that was growing in
size and scale.
· Every attempt made to eliminate the gap
failed.
· As Raju put it, "it was like riding a
tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten."
· Cashing out by selling Maytas Infrastructure
and Maytas Properties to Satyam for an estimated Rs 7,800 crore was the last
straw. The attempt failed and Raju made the stunning confessions three weeks
later.
An eye opener , Always be careful in the market
ReplyDeleteNice Article Sir
ReplyDeleteGood Read
ReplyDeleteHope not to see any more such scams in India
ReplyDeleteAny such stock heading satyam way? I dont think there is any way to find out a fraud to such personalized extent,,,and best example being satyam....so there is no point in trying to find reality as a retail investor can easily fooled in markets...
ReplyDeleteSir can you write an article about GST ?
ReplyDeleteIm confused how it works
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Deletehttp://future-stocks.blogspot.com/2016/08/what-gst-is-in-simple-terms_12.html
DeleteThank you Sir
Delete