Business Standard

Clean chit to PE firms, I-T in Siddhartha case

His private firm MACEL had ~2,693 cr unaccounte­d dues towards Coffee Day Enterprise­s, finds probe

- DEBASIS MOHAPATRA

The Coffee Day Enterprise­s saga has taken a new turn with the investigat­ing team on Friday giving a clean chit to private equity investors and income tax authoritie­s in connection with the demise of the company’s founder chairman, V G Siddhartha, last year.

The probe team appointed by Coffee Day (CDEL) and headed by retired DIG of the CBI Ashok Kumar Malhotra found that a private firm of Siddhartha — Mysore Amalgamate­d Coffee Estates Limited (MACEL) — had outstandin­g dues worth ~2,693 crore towards CDEL. This amount was not accounted for in the financial statements of the company.

While the investigat­ion found that MACEL owed ~3,535 crore to several subsidiari­es of CDEL on July 31, 2019, financial statements mentioned only ~842 crore as dues at the end of March 2019. The gap of more than ~2,600 crore found no mention in the balance sheet, making it a blind spot open to investigat­ion.

“We found that a significan­t portion of the aforementi­oned money may have been spent to buy back equity from PE investors, repay loans and to pay interest apart from funding certain further private investment­s which are outside the scope of investigat­ion,” the firm said.

“Consequent­ly, these amounts are not precisely ascertaina­ble,” the company said in an exchange filing.

Backing the statement made by Siddhartha that he was not able to create a right profitable business model, the report pointed out that the rising liquidity crunch, repeated reminders by PE firms and lenders to repay money could have triggered averse behaviour stimulus for the founder of Coffee Day group.

“We are of the considered opinion that the communique­s, mail exchanges and the one-on-one discussion­s with the key management personnel and other officers of the company and its subsidiari­es are not suggestive of any existing informatio­n to draw a positive inference that Siddhartha’s team and the senior management were cognitive of the manner in which certain transactio­ns were carried out,” the report said.

The board of CDEL on Friday empowered the chairman to appoint a former judge of the Supreme Court or the High Court to suggest and oversee actions for recovery of the dues from MACEL.

CDEL, which runs the coffee chain Coffee Day, also said its debt level has substantia­lly come down to ~3,200 crore from ~7,200 crore in March 2019.

“Disinvestm­ent process in the group continues and we are confident of an effective solution to all stakeholde­rs,” said the company.

 ??  ?? Siddhartha, in a letter purportedl­y written by him before his death, had said the management and his family were unaware of his personal financial dealings
Siddhartha, in a letter purportedl­y written by him before his death, had said the management and his family were unaware of his personal financial dealings

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