The Asian Age

A FALL FROM GRACE

USHA ANANTHASUB­RAMANIAN, CHANDA KOCHHAR AND SHIKHA SHARMA WERE POWERFUL FACES IN INDIA’S FINANCIAL SECTOR. BUT ALLEGATION­S OF CORRUPTION AND FRAUD ABRUPTLY ENDED THEIR REIGN.

- ANJANA DAS AND FALAKNAAZ SYED

They were the three reigning queens of the male dominated Indian banking industry until recently when the cracks started to appear on the scripted story of their successes, decisions, policies and actions.

All these are now part of the soon- to- be forgotten history. A former woman bank chief said the system is robust, institutio­nalised and does not differenti­ate man or woman. It only rewards leaders and follows due process of law if there are any allegation­s to be investigat­ed.

J. N. Gupta, former executive director at Securities and Exchange Board of India ( SEBI) said, “One should never generalise corruption on gender basis. The fact is that each individual has its own character and whenever something goes wrong the true character of the person is revealed. In case of Usha Ananthasub­ramanian there are no allegation­s of personal corruption by the CBI and it’s only a procedural issue. No one said that she has benefited personally or she has benefited any individual. The Punjab National Bank ( PNB) fraud is being investigat­ed and we do not know what will be the final outcome.”

Adding to the list, in the latest NSE co- location scam, SEBI has questioned former National Stock Exchange of India Limited ( NSE) Managing Director ( MD) Chitra Ramakrishn­a also.

As the country was preparing to celebrate 72nd Independen­ce Day, Centre gave CBI the permission to act against Allahabad Bank MD Usha Ananthasub­ramanian in the ` 14000 crore fraud at PNB. The government dismissed Usha, former MD and CEO of Punjab National Bank and MD of Allahabad Bank on the day of her superannua­tion on August 14.

Ananthasub­ramanian was divested of all her powers after being named in a CBI chargeshee­t in the multi- crore PNB fraud case but had continued to be an employee of the bank. She was at the helm of PNB in two stints. She was the Executive Director at PNB from July 2011 to November 2013, and went on to head the bank between August 2015 and May 2017, before moving to Allahabad Bank.

“Usha Ananthasub­ramanian and some other senior bank officials were in the know of the fraud, ignored the circulars and kept “misleading” the RBI about the true state of affairs involving PNB Dubai and the Indian Overseas Bank, Chandigarh. Yet they did not take any corrective action and remained silent spectators. This facilitate­d continuanc­e of the fraud resulting in wrongful loss to the PNB,” the CBI said in the charge sheet.

A career banker, Usha also headed Bharatiya Mahila Bank which was merged with SBI in April 2017. In January this year, she became the first woman chairman of the Indian Banks’ Associatio­n.

The curtains were finally drawn on the CEO of ICICI Bank, Chanda Kochhar. In June, she voluntaril­y decided to go on a leave to facilitate an independen­t probe into allegation­s of quid pro quo in her dealings with the Videocon group, the bank had said. Chanda, daughter of the principal of an engineerin­g college had joined ICICI Bank in 1984 as a management trainee.

The CBI has already registered a preliminar­y enquiry into allegation­s that the ICICI Bank chief ’ s husband Deepak Kochhar’s company NuPower Renewables received an investment from a Videocon group company as a quid pro quo for a loan from the bank.

“In Chanda Kochhar’s case, she has not been proven guilty. The enquiry commission is yet to come out with it's report. There is a slight difference between the two cases. Chanda has been accused of helping a company, while in the case of Usha, it’s the responsibi­lity as head of the institutio­n where she has been accused of being lacking. In both the cases, the jury is not out. So we should be cautious of putting the corrupt person tag on them. It's unfair,” added Gupta.

The CBI is enquiring into the conflict- of- interest allegation­s against ICICI Bank on granting loans to the Videocon Group, said the ICICI Bank in the filing to US SEC.

In case of Shikha Sharma, MD and CEO, Axis Bank, the case was different as it has pure incapabili­ty on work front to check the NPAs and poor asset quality of the Axis Bank because of which RBI was irked.

Earlier in April, RBI asked the Axis Bank board to reconsider the fourth three- year term it gave CEO Shikha last year. Shikha born to an army officer, began her career with ICICI Bank in 1980 and spent a 29- year tenure with the ICICI group.

Shikha took over the reins of the bank in 2009. She has been credited enough with building the bank's investment banking and the retail businesses. But over the last few years, its toxic loans h av e increased considerab­ly.

It’s a wrong notion that women have more integrity than men. Integrity and credibilit­y has nothing to do with gender — SHRIRAM SUBRAMANIA­N MD, INGOVERN

Under Sharma’s tenure, the gross NPAs of the bank rose from 0.96 per cent in March 2009 to 5.28 per cent in December 2017. The bank’s increased exposure to sectors such as infrastruc­ture, power, and mining have mostly turned to NPAs.

In the aftermath of the November 2016 note ban, Axis Bank once again found itself in a controvers­y. At least 19 of its employees were suspended for flouting norms and for alleged money laundering.

GENDER DOESN’T DEFINE CORRUPTION

A clinical psychologi­st at a leading college in Mumbai said, “The whole work scenario is changing. More women are coming in the workplace and at top positions so its natural that you are seeing a rising number of such frauds committed by them. It has nothing to do with gender.”

Then there was a credibilit­y crisis also. It has been noticed twice by the central bank for under- reporting bad loans for financial years 2016 and 2017. The divergence was around ` 9,480 crore. In 2017, the lender once again reported a loan divergence of ` 5,633 crore.

Then came the WhatsApp informatio­n leaks when in December, SEBI ordered Axis Bank to probe insider trading allegation­s against bank officials following reports that the lender’s earnings were already being shared on WhatsApp before it was sent to the exchanges.

Shriram Subramania­n, managing director InGovern ( a proxy advisory firm) said, “It’s a wrong notion that women have more integrity than men. Integrity and credibilit­y has nothing to do with gender. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. This saying does not have any gender implicatio­n.”

Only history and investigat­ing agencies will judge them, said a finance ministry official.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ( Left to right) Shikha Sharma, Usha Ananthasub­ramanian and Chanda Kochhar
( Left to right) Shikha Sharma, Usha Ananthasub­ramanian and Chanda Kochhar
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Shriram Subramania­n
Shriram Subramania­n
 ??  ?? Chitra Ramakrishn­a
Chitra Ramakrishn­a

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India