Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

DHFL auditors filed fraud complaint in Aug

- Jayshree P Upadhyay ■ jayshree.p@livemint.com

THE CRUCIAL PIECE OF INFORMATIO­N WAS WITHHELD FROM BANKS AND SHAREHOLDE­RS BY THE MORTGAGE LENDER’S MANAGEMENT

MUMBAI: Auditors of Dewan Housing and Finance Corp. Ltd filed a fraud complaint with the corporate affairs ministry as early as August, a crucial piece of informatio­n that the lender’s management withheld from bank and shareholde­rs, two people with direct knowledge said.

The ministry has since ordered the Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office (SFIO) to probe the case. The reference by statutory auditors Deloitte Haskins and Sells and Chaturvedi and Shah was made under Section 143(12) of the Companies Act, 2013 that mandates them to inform the ministry if they suspect fraud, one of the two people cited above said on condition of anonymity.

“The auditors are not obligated to let the company know if they are making a fraud reference, but DHFL was apprised of the same,” said the second person, who also declined to be named.

Without knowledge of the suspected fraud, lenders proceeded to work on a resolution plan to revive the debt-laden home financier.

The debt recast plan stands scuttled after informatio­n about the fraud and the SFIO probe trickled in. Out of DHFL’s total debt of about ₹83,873 crore, it owes ₹38,342 crore to banks.

Under the proposed restructur­ing plan, banks were to take a 51% stake in the company by converting a portion of DHFL’s debt into equity.

The lenders are waiting for the SFIO probe to get over before they can work on the resolution plan.

The earlier resolution plan will be pursued only if it is found that there was no mala fide intent on the part of the promoters.

“During the course of the audit, the auditors had also raised concerns on certain repayments,” the first person said. “Repayments by some entities could not be traced in the financial statements of DHFL.”

“There was no such observatio­n. And even the audit report was with disclaimer­s,” a person close to the DHFL management said. “The company also made provisions for losses, according to the audited financials. And that was made public in the management notes and the financials submitted to banks.”

A special audit by accounting firm KPMG also made similar observatio­ns in a report, portions of which have been reviewed by Mint.

The KPMG report cites alleged fraudulent transactio­ns worth ₹31,000 crore.

The KPMG report cited repayments by 28 entities amounting to ₹1,941 crore, which could not be traced in DHFL’s bank statements.

In fact, the statutory auditors in their report had pointed to transactio­ns of over ₹40,000 crore that were problemati­c and for which the management failed to provide satisfacto­ry responses.

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