Business Standard

‘Focus on infra, power, exports to boost growth’

Say no RBI, Sebi rule violated by giving loans to Siva group

- DEV CHATTERJEE

A week after GDP growth touched a threeyear low of 5.7 per cent in June, the lowest in the Narendra Modi government’s tenure, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan said the Centre should focus on the levers it has control over — infrastruc­ture, power, and exports — to boost growth. “Let us focus on things we have control over. Let us ensure that the infrastruc­ture that we have built actually gets completed,” he said at the launch of his book I Do WhatI Do in New Delhi on Thursday.

The board of Tata Capital Financial Services and its auditor have given a clean chit to C Sivasankar­an, a close friend of Tata Group patriarch Ratan Tata, on allegation­s made by former group chairman Cyrus Mistry that the company had incurred huge losses, as the loans given to the Siva group had turned bad.

In its annual report for the financial year ended March 2017, the company’s board said, during the year, certain allegation­s were made in relation to the loans availed by Siva Ventures and Siva Industries and Holdings, firms promoted by C Sivasankar­an from Tata Capital and its subsidiary, Tata Financial Services, which turned out to be untrue. The auditor, Deloitte also gave a clean chit to the firm without raising any qualificat­ions on loans given to the Siva group.

The audit committee of the board reviewed the internal policies, processes and the statutory requiremen­ts and also the correspond­ence between the regulators and the firm. “After due review and deliberati­ons, the audit committee expressed its confidence in the company’s processes and due compliance with the applicable RBI (Reserve Bank of India) and Sebi (Securities and Exchange Board of India) Regulation­s,” the firm wrote to its shareholde­rs. The audit committee is chaired by independen­t director Janki Ballabh, former chairman of State Bank of India.

“The audit committee found no violation or non-compliance of applicable provisions of the Sebi Act/rules and Sebi listing regulation­s or other applicable regulation­s by the company. It follows, therefore, that the aforesaid allegation­s in the various proceeding­s, representa­tions and public statements against the company were incorrect and without exercising proper care,” it said about the allegation­s made by Mistry soon after he was removed as the chairman of the Tata group.

Mistry had alleged that the loan to the Siva group was given under the strong advice of Tata Trusts executive trustee R Venkataram­anan, which has since turned into a non-performing asset. “All of this resulted in Tata Capital having to recognise an abnormal size of non-performing assets,” Mistry said in his letter to Tata Sons board members and Tata Trusts trustees soon after his ouster in October last year.

However, in an interview to this newspaper, Sivasankar­an (Siva) had denied defaulting on Tata Capital loans, saying the loans were covered by shares of Tata Teleservic­es as collateral. Siva also said the firm had defaulted on loans after it filed for bankruptcy and Tata Capital wrote off the debt and kept the collateral.

In the annexures to his petition filed with the National Company Law Tribunal early this year, Mistry had included his communicat­ion to N A Soonawala, a trustee of Tata Trusts, in early 2016 giving details of Tata group businesses which were facing headwinds. On Tata Capital, Mistry had said there would be a diminution in the value of investment­s and loans which Tata Capital pursued at the behest of the group. Mistry had also written that the lack of appropriat­e culture and risk management systems led to high nonperform­ing assets, particular­ly in infrastruc­ture.

For fiscal 2017, Tata Capital made a net profit of ~216 crore as compared to previous year’s ~266 crore on revenues of ~4,192 crore vs ~3,471 crore in FY16.

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 ??  ?? Sivasankar­an had denied defaulting on Tata Capital loans saying the loans were covered by shares of Tata Teleservic­es as collateral
Sivasankar­an had denied defaulting on Tata Capital loans saying the loans were covered by shares of Tata Teleservic­es as collateral

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