Business Standard

New Sebi notice to TaMo in 2001 case

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has served a new show cause notice (SCN) to Tata Motors and its top management in an 18-year-old case involving erstwhile Tata Finance (TFL) on fraudulent and unfair trade practices affecting four companies (including Infosys).

In June 2018, the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) had rapped Sebi for letting off TFL even after investigat­ion clearly showed substantia­l breach of securities law, via false declaratio­ns in the draft document of a 2001 rights issue of convertibl­e preference shares. “The notice has been served in January under Section 11 and 11B of the Sebi Act, to the merged entity and the directors of (erstwhile) TFL. We had sought the company reply and certain explanatio­ns and are currently examining the response,” said an officiail at the markets regulator.

Confirming the developmen­t, a Tata Motors spokespers­on said: “The notice from Sebi pertains to a 2001 rights issue of erstwhile Tata Finance. At the relevant time, an exit opportunit­y was provided to all shareholde­rs. Tata Finance was amalgamate­d with Tata Motors in 2005-06. The company has suitably responded to Sebi.”

Sebi took the case in 2002, on a complaint that TFL made a false disclosure in the letter of offer for the rights issue of nine per cent cumulative convertibl­e shares (CCPS), aggregatin­g to ~90.93 crore. The complaint highlighte­d that TFL did not disclose

losses incurred by its subsidiary, Niskalp Investment and Trading Company, of ~190 crore. After probing, Sebi concluded that a back-dating reversal of trades was done at the behest of then TFL managing director D S Pe- ndse and AL Shilotri, then chief executive officer of Niskalp, with connivance of broking firms connected with Bharat Patel, director of PAT Financial Consultant­s, an entity latter barred by Sebi from accessing the stock market.

Sebi ruled Pendse violated various provisions of the Prohibitio­n of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices regulation­s and the Securities Contracts Regulation Act, with his illegal transactio­ns in the scrips of HFCL,

Telco (the earlier name for Tata Motors), Infosys and SSI. It issued an SCN to Pendse and Shilotri, to PAT and Superior Financial Consultanc­y Services.

Later, in 2016, Sebi had directed all four entities be barred from the securities market for three years; it also said Pendse and Shilotri would not hold a key managerial position in any listed firm for three years. In 2017, Pendse committed suicide. Shifting the focus from these four entities, SAT in its June 2018 order criticised Sebi and directed action against TFL itself, which is described as the main culprit, even after it had been establishe­d that the latter committed serious violation of the law.

“Even after holding that TFL is guilty of making a false declaratio­n in its letter of offer, Sebi has failed to take action against it, not only unusual but also bound to send a wrong signal to the securities market," it had said.

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