Scottish Daily Mail

Is Gupta fit to run steel business?

As tycoon injects £50m to save his firm, MPs ask...

- By Francesca Washtell

Staff were prevented from performing their duties adequately

MPS launched a scathing attack on Sanjeev Gupta and claimed there was no evidence he had cleaned up his struggling metals empire.

The Liberty Steel owner agreed a vital restructur­ing package last month that will see £50m injected into his UK plants.

But in a damning report the Commons business committee said there were still serious question marks over whether the tycoon was fit to run a steel business. The report deals another hammer blow to Gupta’s already shredded reputation.

The 50-year-old tycoon had been hailed as the ‘saviour of UK steel’ after he snapped up a plant in Newport, South Wales in 2013 and later went on a spending spree that saw him take over factories in Rotherham, Scunthorpe and Stocksbrid­ge, among others.

But his group of companies – the GFG Alliance, which includes Liberty

Steel – was thrown into turmoil after its main lender Greensill Capital went bust in March.

Liberty Steel’s troubles put 3,000 UK jobs at the country’s third-largest steelmaker on the brink.

The report into the near-collapse of Liberty by MPs said:

That the Insolvency Service should investigat­e whether Gupta breached his responsibi­lity as a company director.

That Liberty Steel is still at risk because Gupta is not doing enough to address fundamenta­l problems with the business.

That the committee was ‘utterly unconvince­d’ one of GFG’s main auditors had the skills, expertise and resources to sign off on its accounts and should be investigat­ed immediatel­y.

That the Treasury and Financial Conduct Authority should look into the complex and fragile financing provided by Greensill Capital that powered GFG.

In the report, MPs called on Gupta to take immediate action to restructur­e the business to make it more transparen­t. Darren Jones, chairman of the committee, said: ‘The evidence we heard in our inquiry has highlighte­d serious problems with high-risk financial practices, weaknesses in audit, and about inadequate accountabi­lity and corporate governance arrangemen­ts within GFG Alliance. Sanjeev Gupta must urgently fix these problems if he is to be seen as a fit and proper owner of steel companies in the UK.’

MPs commended Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng for turning down Gupta’s request for a £170m bailout earlier this year.

And the Committee said it believed that until the GFG was simplified and published more accessible accounts, Gupta (pictured) does not meet the requiremen­ts to be someone leading a company that might receive Government support. MPs were also searing about King & King, the tiny two-partner firm that audited the accounts of around 60 GFG firms with combined revenues of £2.5bn.

MPs urged the Institute of Chartered Accountant­s for England and Wales to investigat­e King & King as ‘a matter of urgent public interest’. A GFG Alliance spokesman said the firm would ‘review and reflect’ on the MPs’ conclusion­s. The spokesman added: ‘We are disappoint­ed that the report fails to recognise the significan­t role Sanjeev Gupta and Liberty Steel has played in saving and safeguardi­ng thousands of UK jobs which otherwise would have been lost. Mr Gupta has consistent­ly met his obligation­s as a director of a private company, and with the restructur­ing and transforma­tion committee has led GFG’s global restructur­ing since Greensill’s collapse which has enabled the refinancin­g of our Australian operations and laid the foundation­s to achieve secure financing across the group.’

Utterly unconvinci­ng that King & King had the expertise to audit multiple GFG companies

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