Listening to D.R. Mehta and his analysts, you get an impression that the Securities andExchange Board of India (SEBI) chief and his men would soon wipe off the Rs 2,000-crorestock-and-banking scam triggered by disgraced operator Ketan Parekh like so many cobwebson the wall. But scratch the surface and Mehta admits that this time, more than insidertrading and price-rigging, the regulatory authority is worried about the massive presenceof underworld slush funds in India's financial markets.
He refuses to be drawn into the issue, except saying the arrest of film and diamond moghulBharat Shah set the cat among the pigeons and prompted a full-fledged probe intounderworld involvement in the stockmarkets. Says Mehta: "Besides films, we suspecthawala money is being routed into the market. But we don't have any proof because alltransactions are made through cheques and on paper everything's perfectly legal." Headds: "Besides, we are not the authority to investigate such an issue."
What is the modus operandi? SEBI officials admit that over the last one-and-a-half years,there have been countless reports of Indians routing their funds through the hawalacircuit to fictitious companies in London, Singapore, Mauritius and Dubai. These firms, inturn, re-invest this money through foreign institutional investors (FIIS) and bse brokers.One just needs to route the funds through sub-accounts linked to FIIS.
"The 1992 Harshad Mehta scam arose because of problems in portfolio managementaccounts. But this time, one needs to seriously probe the role of FIIS. But neither thefinance ministryincluding the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)nor the externalaffairs ministry wants to probe this angle," say sources. The issue was first raisedby former SEBI chief G.V. Ramakrishna who wanted FIIS to avoid the sub-account route (FIIsub-accounts don't need SEBI registration) to operate in India. "His intention was toinvite only those who are regulated in their home country. But today money can easily flowin through the sub-account route," sources add.
They also say that it was in March last year when the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and I-Tdepartment submitted a detailed note on the issue to the finance minister but YashwantSinha refused to take any action, ostensibly because this could make India lookforeign-investor-unfriendly.
SEBI officials admit they're completely perplexed by the investments made by a largenumber of FIIS. For instance, Credit Suisse First Boston picked up dsq shares worth Rs 82crore in January, and Rs 40 crore in February. Obscure FIIS Banco de Sardegna andFledgling Nominees picked up hfcl shares worth Rs 50 crore and Rs 37 crore. There's more.An FII by the name of gmo Trust picked up shares worth Rs 59 crore in Global Telesystemsin January. Also, investments by a Singapore governmental body registered as an FII insome of these controversial stocks linked to Parekh. "We are no one to prevent suchinvestments but it's baffling. More so because all FIIS claim to have solid research wingswhich routinely advise them on possible investments," says a SEBI official, addingthat the matter has been raised on many occasions with the finance ministry but there hasbeen little response.
But now, things could change dramatically. Investigating agencies admit having collecteddetailed evidence of corporate and stockbroker links with the underworld. Late last year,Mumbai Police's Crime Branch and the IB questioned several sharebrokers on charges ofrigging prices of ice shares, most with weak fundamentals.
It's a different matter that the files never moved out of the finance ministry till the KPepisode rattled the capital markets. And now, the Mumbai branch of the cbi claims it haszeroed in on a number of issues which will help the investigators flush out those withunderworld links in the country's financial markets.
"Parekh has admitted he knows people with underworld connections. We are probing thematter," says a top cbi official. Explaining the underworld's interest in themarkets, he adds: "There's a lull in the city's construction activities and relatedbusinesses. Besides, film financingfor the time beingis risky for theunderworld. Stockmarkets offer an easy alternative." The official, who requestedanonymity, said the agencies are not only targeting brokers but also zeroing on promotersof tainted firms. Says he: "We're also looking at brokers backing TV channels,software production houses and filmmaking companies." The police says brokers foundguilty of investing funds on behalf of the underworld can attract severe punishment underthe new Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (under which Bharat Shah and filmproducer Nazim Rizvi were arrested).
Agrees suspended bse chairperson-designate Deena Mehta: "It was such dubious dealingsof a handful of brokers which prompted the bse to set up a special committee of 50chartered accountants last year to inspect the account books of all listed brokers.Initially, we never looked into the source of funds. After all, we should not be botheredif the transactions are clean. And the hesitancy was also because it was not exactly ourjurisdiction. But of late, there have been serious indications of slush funds penetratingthe stockmarkets. We didn't think twice. We have also told the investigating agencies tolook into the role of the promoters. No insider trading can be done without the activeconnivance of the promoter."
She should know. Sample some of the loops the agencies are working on now:
- Checking out why some officials of tainted companies visited Dubai and Singapore.
- After agencies zeroed in on Bollywood producers' underworld links earlier this year, they taped conversations of some of the brokers handling the controversial K-10 stocks, which revealed startling information about a long-standing link between the stockmarkets and the underworld.
- The BSE's demand of a detailed probe into the role of the FIIS, especially checking the bonafides of those who continue to use the Mauritius route.
- The promoter-operator-financier nexus which results in manipulative, inflationary investments (eg, Unit Trust of India's ICDs, NCDs, debentures, loans, advances, preferential shares and private placements in companies like DSQ Software, Zee Telefilms and hfcl. Again, uti's holding in infotech scrips was a mere 0.36 per cent in 1998, which shot up to 33 per cent two years later.
- Papers pertaining to the real estate properties of KP.
- List of bigwigs in Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Ahmedabad and Hyderabad whose funds KP invested in the market.
- The shareholding pattern of Global Trust Bank14.7 per cent held by Nirma, Adani Exports and Parekh.
- Links between promoters of companies like HFCL and DSQ Software, and Parekh.
- The links of the tainted companies with bureaucrats. For instance, why did Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) chairman N. Vittal agree to inaugurate a northern India plant of Padmini Technologies, against whom ED investigations are still on?
Says Kirit Somaiya, bjp MP and president of the Mumbai-based Investors' GrievancesForum: "The underworld is firmly entrenched in the stockmarkets.Both SEBI and bse areaware of a large number of brokers with strong links with the filmworld. The link betweenthe entertainment industry and the underworld is well known, but now the capital marketsare proving a relatively safer haven for them to dupe the gullible investor."Somaiya's petitions to probe the underworld connection in the stockmarkets have beenpending with the finance minister for more than a year now.
But with SEBI and bse taking evasive action, does the finger point at the RBI? Senior RBIofficials hotly contest such charges, saying it clears the application of a particular FIIonly after it completes the stipulated formalities laid down by SEBI through itssingle-window clearance. Says a top RBI official: "It's actually the role of theexternal affairs ministry to check out treaties between India and such countries fromwhere FIIs are operating. And why underworld, look at the way cooperative banks functionin the country! RBI just does not have the manpower to tackle such crises. So scams areinevitable."
In a report (drafted by a high-powered committee on urban cooperative banks) submitted tothe finance ministry last year, the RBI admits the situation is almost out of control:"The existence of a large number of unlicensed banks has become a cause of concern.As on September 30, 1999, a total of 181 banks were still unlicensed entities. Of these,97 continued to be unlicensed for over three decades. The existence of such large numberof unlicensed banks places the RBI in a state of regulatory discomfiture," says thereport.
"RBI officials have warned state governments many times of dubious dealings of suchcooperative banks but the ruling parties defended the banks and scuttled any probe. In thecase of Madhavpura Bank, we warned the Gujarat government way back in 1998 after aninvestor forum highlighted that the bank's management was siphoning off funds. But thegovernment took no action. So how do we know whose money has come in and who has made akilling at the cost of an innocent investor?" the director asks.
The irony of the case lies here. In what appears to be an ideal pass-the-buck syndrome,not many regulators of the country's financial markets (including the government) areinterested in probing sources of slush investments. And unless that is done, the problemis likely to continue. At the cost of the small investor, of course.