Business Standard

Concurrent auditor blamed for not detecting PNB fraud

- SOMESH JHA

State-owned Punjab National Bank has blamed the concurrent auditor at its Brady House branch in Mumbai for not detecting the ~129 billion scam related to fraudulent letters of undertakin­g (LoUs) issued to the Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi groups of companies.

In its submission to investigat­ive agencies and the government, PNB said LoUs were fraudulent­ly issued for seven years, transmitti­ng through SWIFT, an internatio­nal messaging system, on a standalone basis.

“The reconcilia­tion of SWIFT messages with the trade module of the core banking system was not followed and the concurrent auditor did not point out this irregulari­ty,” PNB informed the government.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has also not conducted forensic audits of all SWIFT communicat­ions and messages of banks so far. However, the RBI is scrutinisi­ng “select banks” to assess their operationa­l control framework, Minister of State for Finance Shiv Pratap Shukla told the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday.

The LoUs were issued for companies belonging to Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi to foreign branches of Indian banks without a sanctioned limit and without making entries in the trade finance module of PNB due to which the transactio­ns went undetected.

The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) has arrested PNB’s former employee Bishnubrat­a Mishra who worked as a concurrent auditor for the Brady House branch between 2011 and 2015. The agency is also investigat­ing Mohinder Kumar Sharma, who was the internal chief auditor of the branch and was supposed to verify daily transactio­ns and report irregulari­ties to the bank.

The RBI, in a statement last month, had termed the fraud as an “operationa­l risk arising on account of delinquent behaviour by one or more employees of the bank, and failure of internal controls.”

After the fraud came to light, PNB initiated the process of hiring new concurrent auditors for the bank. The bank has now ensured that the tenure of concurrent auditors will initially be for one year and will be extended for two years based on performanc­e of the auditor.

Concurrent auditors examine financial transactio­ns at the branch level and generate a daily report. They are considered to be a part of a bank's early warning system to ensure timely detection of irregulari­ties and lapses.

At PNB, concurrent auditors are usually former employees of the bank with experience of 20 years in the banking sector. The RBI had issued fresh guidelines in July 2015 asking the management of all banks to “bestow serious attention” to the process of appointing concurrent auditors. It had also directed banks to review the effectiven­ess of the concurrent auditing system once a year and take “necessary measures to correct lacunae”. According to the RBI guidelines, concurrent auditors have to ensure transactio­ns are within the policy parameters of the bank’s head office and also examine whether transactio­ns violate RBI rules.

 ?? PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR ??
PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR

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