Deccan Chronicle

Fraud whiff: Will Infy go the Satyam way?

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The IT major Infosys’ dramatic meltdown after a whistleblo­wer alleged questionab­le accounting practices, laying the company open to a potentiall­y damaging class action suit in the United States, couldn’t come at a worse time for the country’s highest software exporter. Or, for that matter, the Indian economy, hit by an unpreceden­ted slowdown, facing one financial crisis after another, with the latest corporate fraud disclosure coming from Punjab Maharashtr­a Cooperativ­e Bank.

Infy stocks have crashed, and it’s 9.19 lakh shareholde­rs lost `52,922.18 crores — that’s a wipeout of roughly US$ 7 billion — in one day, with market capitalisa­tion dipping from `3.28 lakh crore to `2.75 lakh crore.

Infosys chairman Nandan Nilekani has stepped in to institute an in-house inquiry into the matter, keeping both CEO Salil Parikh and Chief Financial Officer, Nilanjan Roy, the two men accused of indulging in “unethical practices to boost short-term revenue and profits”, and whose conduct will be the primary focus of the inquiry, out of the investigat­ion. And while that is the correct thing to do, IT insiders have raised questions on the ambit of the Infosys’ Audit Committee and whether it will go far enough.

Second, in a sign that the company may have been slow to tackle the issue head-on, it took Infosys a full month since the whistleblo­wers sent the letter to the company’s board on September 20 to institute an inquiry by an independen­t body, with some reporting it was not the first such complaint that the whistleblo­wers had made over the last two years. The company has also now admitted that it is in receipt of a further complaint dated October 3, which was written to the Office of the Whistleblo­wer Protection Programme in the US. If anything, this is an indication that in this reprise of 2017, few lessons had been learned from the setback two years ago when its then CEO Vishal Sikka stood accused of alleged irregulari­ties in a $200 million acquisitio­n that finally saw founder Narayana Murthy step in and ultimately force Mr Sikka to leave, albeit with no charges ever being proven.

Clearly, the whistleblo­wers’ accusation­s of impropriet­y against Mr Parekh and Mr Roy, for the second time in as many years, in a company that is synonymous with the IT boom in this southern tech hub could not have come at a worse time for Infosys, trying to keep one step ahead of younger and more nimble-footed rivals.

The whistleblo­wers’ allegation­s of impropriet­y against Mr Parekh, who allegedly insisted that employees inflate profits on large deals as well as his own travel bills — none of which Mr Parekh has responded to, and is unlikely to, given Mr Nilekani’s tampdown on comment on the matter — is a signal that Asia’s second biggest software exporter, should have acted faster on the many complaints sent to it, since Mr Parekh took over in January 2018.

Infosys founders, once a byword for financial probity, must clean house. Or go the way of outsourcin­g firm Satyam Computers, and its `7,000 crore accounting scam of 2009.

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