Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Centre plans to geotag firms to prevent fraud

Move will help spot shell firms operating from same premises

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad and Remya Nair gireesh.p@livemint.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Companies may soon have to geo-tag their registered offices in the statutory filings with the Registrar of Companies (RoC), as the government seeks to prevent fraud by tightening regulatory systems.

Geo-tagging, or attaching data of the exact location of the office, will allow the online return filing system to alert government officials wherever it detects far too many companies are registered in the same premises, a trend noticed in past investigat­ions into fraudulent companies.

“This will help us identify instances of one building being used by hundreds of shell companies as their registered office or of companies citing vacant plots as their registered office address. It will serve as an early warning system for detecting mushroomin­g of shell companies,” minister of state for corporate affairs PP Chaudhary said in an interview. “We are seriously thinking of introducin­g this requiremen­t.”

With this move, the ministry seeks to prevent abuse of the corporate structure by companies to inflate costs by issuing fake invoices and laundering unaccounte­d wealth in the form of loans or equity through bogus transactio­ns.

Many companies that exist only on paper with the same address were found in the past offering what is referred to as “accommodat­ion entries” or bogus transactio­ns without coma mercial substance. A special investigat­ion team led by Justice M.B. Shah, a former judge of the Supreme Court, in 2015 highlighte­d the role played by such entities in money laundering.

The coordinate­s of the registered premises will act as a key input for mining data in the ministry’s IT infrastruc­ture, called MCA21, to zero in on companies with common address, common contact numbers, common directors and sudden and unex- changes in revenue, etc. that may warrant a closer look into its affairs. The idea is to seek the coordinate­s of the registered office at the time of incorporat­ion in the case of new companies and at the time of filing annual returns in the case of existing ones.

“Over a period of time, the disclosure and transparen­cy requiremen­ts for companies have increased. Geo-tagging will certainly help in identifyin­g clusters of companies with the same address,” said Amit Maheshwari, partner at accounting firm Ashok Maheshwary & Associates Llp.

Chaudhary said the government is working on defining what is commonly referred to as shell company. After the November 2016 demonetiza­tion of high-value currency notes, the government combed through records to identify dormant companies and those that were used to launder money. To be sure, not all dormant or defunct companies are involved in wrongdoing. Most of them only default on the statutory requiremen­t of filing annual returns. In some cases, companies default on filing their annual returns because there is no business activity. In a clean-up exercise in 2017-18, the government struck off more than 226,000 such defunct companies from the records for not filing annual returns for two or more years. It also identified some cases that called for a probe. Now, investigat­ions are on into the real ownership of 68 companies that deposited ₹25 crore or more after demonetiza­tion, which the authoritie­s have found suspicious.

Experts said that having a common address alone does not point to wrongdoing. It is a practice among profession­al services companies such as law firms and audit firms often to work from a large, common infrastruc­ture. “The registered office need not necessaril­y be the place from where a business conducts its commercial operations,” a corporate law expert said on condition of anonymity. “Geo-tagging will certainly help in identifyin­g a cluster of businesses, but one has to keep in mind that some start-ups, too, opt to work in clusters. Having a common address is not illegal.”

THE MINISTRY SEEKS TO PREVENT ABUSE OF THE CORPORATE SETUP BY FIRMS TO INFLATE COSTS BY ISSUING FAKE INVOICES

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