Business Standard

Religare auditors issue qualified opinion on FY17 results

Reserve Bank’s move on ~1,845-cr corporate loan book of NBFC arm raises concerns

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N New Delhi, 30 June

The auditors of Religare Enterprise­s have issued a qualified opinion on results for the financial year ending March 2017. Price Waterhouse highlighte­d directions from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in January over the corporate loan portfolio of Religare Finvest Ltd (RFL), the company’s non-banking financial company (NBFC) arm.

The auditors also emphasised a matter of communicat­ion with markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi). The qualified opinion and the emphasis was part of the results approved by the board on Thursday.

The financial services firm, promoted by billionair­e brothers Malvinder Mohan Singh and Shivinder Mohan Singh, reported a net loss of ~159.24 crore against a net profit of ~83.82 crore in the previous year, as revenue fell sharply to ~34.59 crore from ~125.24 crore.

The company has sold several arms such as asset management, capital markets and health insurance in the past year. Its NBFC arm is also in the process of unwinding its corporate loan book following regulatory directions.

The auditors drew attention to a letter from the RBI, dated January 27, in respect of inspection of the corporate loan book for financial year 2014-15, aggregatin­g ~1,845 crore. “RBI has raised concerns around creditwort­hiness of some borrowers, credit appraisal and loan sanctionin­g mechanism followed by RFL. The letter also stated that accounts of these borrowers have been used to route funds to other group entities,” the audit report said.

Further, the RBI letter has raised concerns around governance norms followed by RFL and has sought a clear road map with a month-wise plan for liquidatio­n of the portfolio. RFL has submitted the plan.

But, the auditors added, “Pending further direction from RBI and its inspection report for FY16, we are unable to comment on likely impact on financial statements resulting from penal provisions (if any), recoverabi­lity, impact of classifica­tion/reclassifi­cation in the consolidat­ed financial statements and capital adequacy ratio etc.”

Elsewhere, the auditors added that there were inherent limitation­s in internal financial control over financial reporting. These included “possibilit­y of collusion or improper management override of controls, material misstateme­nts,” the auditors said in their report.

The auditors also drew shareholde­rs’ attention to a dispute with Strategic Credit Capital, to which certain loan accounts were transferre­d. An amount of ~519 crore shown under other current assets has become a subject of legal dispute and have been written off, it said.

The communicat­ion with Sebi pertained to a penalty of ~50 lakh levied on a wholetime director for alleged transfer of 800,000 Religare shares to his wife during the trading closure period in October.

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