Millennium Post

Sebi mulls new whistle-blower mechanism to stem auditor exits

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NEW DELHI: With an aim to unearth financial irregulari­ties and other fraudulent transactio­ns at listed companies, capital market regulator Sebi is planning to set up a new whistle-blower mechanism for auditors and other 'gate-keepers' to report such cases.

The proposed move assumes significan­ce in the wake of several auditors in the recent past decided to exit from their audit mandate after certain listed companies failed to take remedial actions despite financial wrongdoing­s having been flagged in their auditors' observatio­ns. Officials said most of these auditor exits have taken place at a much later stage, but a 'confidenti­ality mechanism' can help in cases of financial frauds being reported at an early stage by auditors, independen­t directors and others considered to be 'gate-keepers' or 'conscience keepers'.

Regulators and enforcemen­t agencies have often stressed that auditors, independen­t directors, investment bankers, valuers and other such entities have a greater responsibi­lity to ensure compliance to regulation­s and safeguard the interest by minority shareholde­rs. While Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has announced a new mechanism to reward informants with up to Rs 1 crore cash for any credible inside informatio­n for providing informatio­n on insider trading at listed companies, this is not applicable to corporate entities and profession­als such as auditors and lawyers. While there were suggestion­s from some quarters that auditors, lawyers and consultant­s on behalf of their firms should also be allowed to avail the 'informant mechanism', Sebi was of the view that corporate entities were as such under a duty to report.

Besides, lawyers are bound of confidenti­ality and it would considered unethical for them to complain against their clients.

"However, as far as gatekeeper­s such as auditors are considered, a separate confidenti­ality mechanism is being proposed," a top official said.

The proposal is in early stages as of now and a final decision would be taken only after a detailed consultati­on process with all the concerned stakeholde­rs, the official added.

The proposed mechanism may cover all kinds of financial irregulari­ties and fraudulent activities, unlike the 'informant mechanism' which is limited to the cases of insider trading.

During the earlier consultati­on process for the 'informant mechanism', it was also proposed that disgruntle­d employees and those facing complaints from the concerned entities should not be allowed to become an informant.

However, Sebi rejected the suggestion while observing that such people could be actually best possible sources for providing an evidence which was otherwise difficult to obtain.

However, Sebi has put in place sufficient safeguard to weed out unwanted tip-offs and frivolous informatio­n.

Officials said it is imperative for Sebi to employ all legitimate means to detect any wrongdoing and initiate action at the earliest to instill confidence among investors and ensure integrity of the market. But, Sebi faces several challenges in establishi­ng

links and procuring proof while probing cases like insider trading and other fraudulent activities, due to which investigat­ion into such cases takes much longer time than in other cases of market manipulati­on.

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