Business Standard

Schools for scandal

- T N NINAN

In India’s age of financial scandal, with YES Bank and the incredible Rana Kapoor in focus, no questions are being asked of its board of directors and senior management, writes T N NINAN

In Mind without Fear, Rajat Gupta tries to make out that he is victim and not culprit. The ex-mckinsey boss contends that New York prosecutor­s went after him because they could not catch the big fish in the financial scandals of 2008, and therefore wanted to show success in chasing smaller fry. It is of course true that the “masters of the universe” (in Tom Wolfe’s evocative phrase) who ran the big investment banks were involved in chicanery and fraud, and got away, but that is nothing new. More often than not, the big financial fish are Teflon-coated. The rigging of the Libor (London inter-bank offered rate) market, crucial for setting interest rates, went on for more than two decades. Yet only a single UBS trader was penalised. Similarly, after the 2008 financial collapse, a single small-timer was convicted for illegality — as a footnote in the film version of The Big Short informs us.

In India’s age of financial scandal, with YES Bank and the incredible Rana Kapoor in focus, no questions are being asked of its board of directors and senior management. It’s no different with the 2018 collapse of IL&FS; key players have not yet been questioned, let alone prosecuted. Indeed, India’s prosecutor­ial establishm­ent would collapse under system over-load if all the mountebank­s in the system had to be brought to justice.

So who do you trust with your money, if a single individual can bring down a longstandi­ng firm — as can happen only in the financial world? Remember the collapse of Barings because of a solitary rogue trader in Singapore. In the opposite scenario, why do regulators stand by while a whole institutio­n gets corrupted? Consider the venerable Deutsche Bank, once a pillar of the German establishm­ent. As David Enrich has detailed in his newly-released Dark Towers, Deutsche Bank was involved in everything from money laundering and manipulati­ng markets to violating internatio­nal sanctions, and from getting into bed with Russian oligarchs to bribing public officials while deceiving government­s and regulators.

As Indian savers and investors are learning, the financial world is a dangerous place. Banks can collapse, markets can be rigged, investment instrument­s can become worthless overnight, auditors can fail to blow the whistle, board directors can be asleep, and regulators can be incompeten­t. But why worry, when Indians have their safe harbour: The public sector banks? Except that building that safe harbour costs money, lots of it. When the state-owned banks ran into trouble five years ago, the government announced what it called the most comprehens­ive reform package since the 1969 bank nationalis­ation. The announced cost was ~70,000 crore. Five years later, the government has pumped in five times that sum, with more likely to come. Savers have their safe harbour so long as the taxpayer picks up the bill.

In any case, private banks too are safe since India has no appetite for bank failure. A number of private banks have disappeare­d into the embrace of other banks, sometimes voluntaril­y but mostly not: Global Trust Bank, Centurion Bank, Times Bank, etc. Fortunatel­y, they were small banks that could be digested. What if the system were really tested? Already, the government finds it has no fiscal room for a war-chest.

It has been said that what the system needs are better managers, so the publicsect­or banks should hire from the private sector. Perhaps, but Rana Kapoor spent many years in Bank of America; he was succeeded at YES Bank by a hapless official from Deutsche Bank; and IL&FS was run by an ex-citibanker.

When multiple and varied shenanigan­s put trust at a discount, there is no silver-bullet solution. Instead, boring things need to get done, like improving market intelligen­ce and responding to early warning signals, improving accountabi­lity and the efficacy of prosecutio­n, understand­ing structures and inter-dependence. Only then will confidence get rebuilt. So the Reserve Bank has much to think about, apart from questions to answer. Still, when “the main thing about money”, as the one-liner in “Wall Street” goes, “is that it makes you do things you don’t want to do”, the financial world is always ripe for the next scandal.

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