Another
major financial scam hit headlines in January 2018 involving “fraudulent and
unauthorized” transactions involving letters of undertaking (guarantee) to
Antwerp based diamantaire Nirav Modi amounting to over Rs. 12,500 crores
at the Punjab National Bank (PNB). Initial reports have suggested that this
originated at a branch in Mumbai where a manager allegedly took advantage of
the incomplete integration of the bank’s core banking platform with the Society
for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) network. The LOUs provided
Nirav Modi access to huge foreign exchange loans provided by banks including
the State Bank of India, Axis Bank, Allahabad Bank and Canara Bank. The diamantaire’s
subsequent default on the loans blew the lid.
It is well known that the Banking industry all over the world,
including India, is a highly regulated industry. Yet, with so many regulations
and agencies monitoring it, Indian banks have been subjected to high profile,
high value frauds with a regularity that is numbing. What is even more galling
is the apparent ease with which the fraudsters seem to get away and live
happily ever after. It makes us wonder if the authorities are really capable of
providing a safe and secure
banking environment for the people in India or are really just paper
tigers. Whatever be the truth, the money has disappeared and there is little
hope of retrieval.
This scam is reminiscent of the fraud that bought down Barings Futures
Singapore (BFS) in the late 90s. Investigations had then revealed that Nick
Leeson, a broker at the Bank’s Singapore office allegedly unbeknownst to the
management, had entered into unauthorized speculative trading, that bought the
bank down.
It is precisely to fix these
types of frauds by lone wolves as well as risks arising from technology related
issues that the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) brought out guidelines
for enhanced scrutiny in the subsequent release of the Basel II guidelines. These
robust guidelines have further been expanded in Basel III release and have largely
succeeded in plugging these types of frauds worldwide. Like many countries,
India too has mandated its banks to adopt these guidelines to bolster their risk
management capabilities.
It will be instructive to look at the level of scrutiny banks in India,
in particular, are subjected to. Firstly, each of these banks have their own
set of guidelines for periodic – usually annual - mandatory audit of high value
transactions both by internal as well as external auditors. This means, in the
PNB scam case, at least ten internal and external audits of the five banks must
have reviewed the same high value transactions of Nirav Modi at different
points in time.
In addition, these banks themselves conduct periodic governance, risk
and compliance audits that would specifically look into any operational or
enterprise risks. Over and top of all this, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
meticulously inspects the banks regularly. This includes on site as well as
offsite surveillance of the banks by dedicated teams.
The million dollar question on everybody’s mind is how did the
diamantaire manage to pull wool over the eyes of PNB and the regulators? The
obvious answer is that the auditors and agencies appear to have been silenced
by invisible hands.
A look at the data published by RBI is indeed telling. (Please see
table below - Bank-wise and Bank Group-wise Gross Non-Performing Assets report
published by RBI at www.rbi.org.in). The
non-performing assets (NPA) or bad loans as a percentage of gross loan jumped
from 6.55% in 2015 to 12.90% in 2016 and then to 12.53% in 2017.
It must be mentioned here that loans take several payments cycles and considerable
delinquency (non-payment of dues) and/or a default to be classified as an NPA.
In other words, Nirav Modi’s loan accounts and consequent exposure to banks
arising out of the letters of undertaking would have been in active audit and regulatory
scrutiny for considerable amount of time before it became a hot potato.
The report itself points to the fact that RBI knew about this
precipitous jump in NPAs at PNB in 2016 or even much earlier. This would have
automatically raised red flags internally and triggered closer review by the
regulator. There is absolutely no gainsaying the fact that Dr.Raghuram Rajan,
the then Governor of the RBI, must have been fully aware of this scam.
As is the wont of such
high profile scams, many questions, including the most obvious ones, remain
unanswered. If data available in public domain was already pointing to almost
doubling of delinquent accounts in just twelve months at PNB, what actions did
the regulators take? Were they prevented from discharging their duties? If so
by whom? What was the role played by the then Ministry of Finance?
At least some things can
be deduced from the above report. PNB must have been aware of this much before
the RBI or the Ministry of Finance were informed since they compiled and sent
the data to RBI. The RBI knew what was
going on at PNB long before the matter became public. Hence the arrest of low
level officers at PNB or the alleged lack of connectivity to SWIFT are nothing
but scapegoats in what now appears to be a premeditated loot of public money.
The PNB executive management and the auditors cannot escape
responsibility for their negligence and apparent inaction, for that is
tantamount to abetment of this colossal crime. The need of the hour is to revamp
the bank’s executive management and clean up its audit and compliance
processes. PNB has to step up the transparency in disclosures and come clean on
the fraud so the real culprits face the law.
Recent media reports have pointed to the involvement of a senior
politician of the UPA regime in this scam. Fingers point to a former minister
in the UPA regime who has also been at the center of multiple other corruption
accusations. Given India’s post-independence history of corruption, this comes as
no surprise at all. That the scam leaked into public domain is the real surprise
if at all there is any.
Banking, as we all know, is a business built on trust and
relationships. Repeated breach of public trust in banks in India are
symptomatic of a deeper malaise in the banking system. It
is now incumbent on the government and it’s investigating agencies to get to
the bottom of the PNB scam and book the culprits – be it lowly officers or the
high and mighty political overlords and bring them to justice. Any delay will
only widen the public’s trust deficit in India’s banks.
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