By Ruma Dubey
The
shocking news for the day was Ramalinga Raju of Satyam Computers finally
tendering in his resignation. But more shocking than his resignation were
the revelations he made about the balance sheet. If we thought that the
Maytas imbroglio was one big scam, then the revelations made in the
balance sheet shocked everyone into a stunned silence. Never ever in the
history of India Inc have we witnessed a scam of this magnitude. And what
makes it all the more baffling is that Raju has been misleading the stock
exchanges, the authorities, the shareholders and the entire country.
This
is not one crooked stockbroker but the promoter of one of the biggest IT
Company of India.
And Raju has stated categorically in his confession that the other members
of the Board were unaware of the balance sheet frauds and the cooking up
of the entire numbers. Is that also really possible? So what exactly is
the purpose of the independent director? Surely, merely Raju stating that
they were unaware does not shift the pointer of suspicion from the
Directors. So did Vinod Dham have a whiff of this, which is why he
resigned earlier? Clearly, what Raju has done is take the entire blame on
himself and thus facilitated the criminal prosecution process. Raju's
parting kind deed? Satyam is
listed on the Nasdaq too and hence Raju will have to send his confession
letter to SEC in USA and
then await prosecution there too.
Yet
what about the auditors? That is the first thing, which comes to mind –
how did the auditors allow this to happen? What is the faith on these
auditors? The balance sheet as on 31st March 2008 shows a Fixed
Deposit of Rs.4,502 crore. So the question which arises is how come Raju
has stated in his confession that Rs.1,230 crore was arranged to
Satyam, which is not reflected in its books, to keep Satyam's operations
running? So this means that Raju has clubbed his personal accounts with
the books of Satyam. What could have happened is that Raju would have
borrowed cash on his personal basis, from his known sources based on his
reputation. And this he has shown as cash balance in the company. How come
the auditors did not provide details of this and did they really check the
veracity of this when they signed having earned in business the dotted
line and approved the accounts of March 2008?
Time
and again, over the last one-year, the ilk's of rating agencies, auditors
have proved that they too are no better than the scam brokers. So if we are talking about
criminal prosecution on Raju with 10 years imprisonment, the auditors are
also a part of this scam and they too need to bring to the books. Auditors
of Satyam have to be punished or else the already battered trust of the
investors will further get trampled. Do the auditors just sign on the
dotted line and do not really conduct an investigation? If the auditors
were clueless while the promoters were cooking up books, what exactly is
this job? A fraud of this magnitude could not have happened without the
knowledge of the auditors, for quarter after quarter, there is just no way
that the auditors would just not have been able to detect the fraud. You
can fool everyone once but not everyone every time.
This
is going to have major ramifications on the entire Indian corporate world,
more so for the IT companies. If the top most IT company can resort to
fraud, what can one even say about those in the mid and small rung? This
will also in the immediate future cast a scanner of doubt over all the IT
companies. But this is sure to have an impact on the FIIs and FDI coming
to India. A
scam in USA is
still considered workable but if it happens in an emerging economy like
India, it
is just not taken. There is always the doubt that whether those
responsible would ever be held responsible. We being Indians, our own
faith has been shaken, then surely for the FII sitting in
New
York,
this could be a huge hit on faith. So, whatever the Govt's monetary and
fiscal package tried to do has been nullified by Raju. Confidence in the
market is shaken and that is the truth, which we will have to live with
for some time.
And
what about the 53,000, employees of Satyam? There was no way they could
have ever imagined in their wildest dreams that the man, who was touted to
be the leader with vision and felt a sense of pride in working with
Satyam. But all this has changed overnight. Compared to this fraud, the
earlier issue of corporate governance seems like petty crime, it is like
comparing a pocket picker to a dacoit. The fate of the 53,000 employees
clearly hangs on fire right now and given the first opportunity to exit,
they will just scoot. Once the new management comes into the picture, then
maybe, it can reassure the employees. But how, is a big question mark.
Huge
remedial measures need to be put in place. The Govt has to step in
immediately and send a message to the FIIs and FDI investors that this was
a one-off occurrence and try to re-instil the faith, back into the system.
Also Nasscom, needs to reassure that all companies are not Satyam and
there are no series of scams waiting to burst out. Tough task but surely
needs to be done. Breaking faith happens in a second but rebuilding it may
happen, if it happens, only over a long period of time.
Satyam
Computers was the most active stock traded on the bourses today. It has
tanked over 80% since the news came in, with investors scrambling to get
out of the stock as soon as possible. With no real basis for a valuation
of the stock now, one does not know how much low, Satyam would go.
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