Business Standard

COGNIZANT STARTS BRIBERY PROBE; NEW CHIEF APPOINTED

Appoints Rajeev Mehta as president

- GIREESH BABU & RAGHU KRISHNAN Chennai/Bengaluru, 30 September

Cognizant Technology Solutions on Friday said it was investigat­ing bribery deals involving its India facilities that might have violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The software services firm also appointed a new president. Cognizant stock crashed over 12 per cent as it opened on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange, where it is listed, on Friday. It said the investigat­ions were at early stages and so cannot define the material impact. The disclosure of internal investigat­ions of corruption comes on a day when it appointed IT services head Rajeev Mehta (pictured) as the president. Cognizant announced the resignatio­n of Gordon Coburn as president, but did not cite any reason.

Cognizant Technology Solutions on Friday said it was investigat­ing bribery deals involving its India facilities that might have violated the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The software services firm also appointed a new president. The Cognizant stock crashed over 12 per cent as it opened on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange, where it is listed, on Friday.

“The company is conducting an internal investigat­ion whether certain payments relating to facilities in India were made improperly and also for possible violation of the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other applicable laws,” Cognizant said in the regulatory filings.

It said the investigat­ions were at an early stage and so couldn’t define the material impact. “The investigat­ion is being conducted under the oversight of the audit committee, with the assistance of an outside counsel, and is currently focused on a small number of company-owned facilities.” The disclosure of internal investigat­ions of corruption comes on a day it appointed IT services head Rajeev Mehta as president. Cognizant announced the resignatio­n of Gordon Coburn as president, but did not cite any reason. It disclosed the corruption probe to the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the US Department of Justice, but remained silent on the developmen­t in a press statement.

Coburn, a Cognizant veteran who has been with the company since inception, has held several finance roles, including chief financial officer, before being elevated as the president in 2012. The US-based Cognizant, which has four of every five employees based offshore in countries such as India, did not disclose whether his abrupt exit was linked to the probe.

A company spokespers­on said, “It was Gordon’s decision to resign. Raj is a proven leader with strong client relationsh­ips forged over 20 years with the company and has been responsibl­e for leading our market-facing and delivery teams in driving industry-leading growth.”

On the probe, the spokespers­on said, “It’s an ongoing internal investigat­ion and we can’t comment further on any aspect of it. Cognizant is a strong company and our fundamenta­ls remain strong. As you know, we do great work. We uncovered this situation through our own compliance processes, voluntaril­y reported it to the government, and are fully cooperatin­g with them. We are conducting a full investigat­ion, under the oversight of the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, with the help of outside counsel.”

The corruption investigat­ion comes at a time when Cognizant is facing headwinds in the financial services and health care verticals, as customers have cut or cancelled projects. Last month, it cited these reasons to cut its annual forecast for the second time to 8.5-9.5 per cent for the current financial year. Cognizant follows the January-to-December financial year.

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