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PwC
compensates Satyam investors — but not Indian ones
Hindustan Times,
May 08, 2011 |
Last
month, foreign investors of Mahindra Satyam
(formerly known as Satyam Computer Services)
received an aggregate of $25.5 million (Rs 114
crore) as compensation from PricewaterhouseCoopers
(PwC, the company's auditor). In a scam that
happened in India, domestic investors have got,
and will get, no thing.
The company's share
price had crashed in one month to Rs 20 per share on January 15,
2009 from Rs 226 on December 16, 2008, following revelations of
India's biggest-ever accounting fraud by Satyam's then chairman B
Ramalinga Raju.
Legal experts say that
in the absence of a provision for class action suits there is
nothing that investors can do but wait for the Securities and
Exchange Board of India (Sebi) case pending in Bombay High Court,
or hope that a consent order is passed by Sebi in agreement with
the company. Others say the agreement in the US lays ground for
similar action in India.
In 2009 Midas Touch
Investors Association filed a case with the Consumer Court and
Supreme Court but it was not admitted, as the petition was
ambiguous.
"The problem is that
for the same company and the same case, investors in US have got
the compensation but Indian investors won't get (anything) for the
lack of a provision in our laws," said Virendra Jain, chairman
MTIA. According to him, even the case filed by Sebi will not offer
compensation; at best it can take penal action on the company and
impose a fine.
Others disagree. "With
PwC agreeing to compensate US investors, it lays the ground for
Indian investors too and all hope is not lost," said Pradeep S
Mehta, secretary general, Consumer Unity and Trust Society.
"Since financial
services are covered by the Consumer Protection Act, they can
approach that," Mehta said. "Investors can also take action under
Tort in the civil court. Alternatively, they can approach the High
Court for Writ Jurisdiction under Article 226 (similar to the
Uphaar Theatre Case in Delhi)."
The Companies Bill,
2009 seeks to provide some powers at the hands of investors.
"Shareholder associations or group of shareholders to be enabled
to take legal action in case of any fraudulent action on the part
of a company, and to take part in investor protection activities
and ‘Class Action Suits'," says one provision.
The Securities and
Exchange Commission in US (equivalent of SEBI in India)
established in its April 5, 2011 order that institutional
investors in the US suffered losses of over $450 million as Satyam
has 65 million American Depository Shares (ADS) representing 11%
of the company's equity shares.
The SEC accused PwC of
"failing to comply with some of the most elementary auditing
standards and procedures." "We are in a silent period," a Mahindra
Satyam spokesperson said. Despite repeated attempts, PwC did not
respond.
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