In the era
of liberalised financial markets in India, it appears that even before the
dust settles on one financial crisis there is a new one in the making. The
latest is the ongoing revelation that a number of cooperative banks and
financial institutions like Provident Funds have “purchased” government
securities (g-secs) through means that flouted RBI guidelines, only to
discover that the instruments they paid for are not going to delivered by
their brokers. The matter came to light when on April 19, a NABARD team
scrutinising the accounts of the Nagpur District Central Cooperative Bank
(NDCCB), reported to the RBI that while the bank had made huge investments
in government securities, it was not in possession of the certificates for
the same. The high profile internet-based brokerage Home Trade, it
transpires, had obtained Rs. 124 crore from NDCCB for investment in
government securities, but had not delivered the certificates. Caught out
by the NABARD team, the Chairman of NDCCB, Sunil Kedar, was the first to
file a complaint against Home Trade on grounds of cheating.
Since then it has been discovered that the disease was more widespread,
involving an as yet unfathomed number of banks, financial institutions and
brokerages. According to Yashwant Sinha’s statement, besides the NDCCB,
purchases of g-secs without delivery, have been made by Wardha District
Central Cooperative Bank (Rs. 25 crore), the Osmanabad District Central
Cooperative Bank (Rs. 30 crore), the Sadaguru Jangli Maharaj Cooperative
Bank (Rs. 40 crore), the Amravati Peoples Cooperative Bank (Rs. 9.5 crore),
The Swarnayug Cooperative Bank (Rs. 58 crore) and the Raghuvanshi
Cooperative Bank (Rs. 5.4 crore). According to the Finance Minister the
brokers involved in the transactions that were not completed were, besides
Home Trade, Indramani Merchants Ltd, Kolkata, Syndicate Management
Services Ltd. Ahmedabad, Giltedge Management Services Ltd., Mumbai, and
Century Dealers Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai. In his view the sums involved were
close to Rs. 275 crore.
Sinha’s statement, of course referred only to the reports
he has received from the RBI, which relates to the set of banks from
Maharashtra. But meanwhile evidence has emerged that the spread of the
crisis is far greater. Once the NDCCB complaint had been filed, the
floodgates were opened. Besides the cooperative banks in Maharashtra, at
least 4 banks from Gujarat (Surat
Nagrik Co-operative Bank, Surat Mahila Co-operative Bank, Karamsad Urban
Co-operative Bank and Navsari Urban Co-operative Bank)
and, in an unusual turn, the Seamen’s Provident Fund, have reported having
invested large sums in as yet undelivered government securities.
When assessing the current crisis we need to take note
of the fact that this crisis comes in the wake of a series of financial
disasters over the last decade or so. We need only recall the engineered
boom in stock markets in the early 1990s which involved all major Indian
and foreign banks and the “big bull” Harshad Mehta, the subsequent
periodic instances of alleged insider trading and price rigging by
corporations and broking firms, the near collapse of UTI, the evidence of
fraudulaent lending practices by some of the apex financial institutions
and, more recently, the infamous Ketan Parekh episode involving among
others the Madhavpura Mercantile Cooperative Bank. In all cases,
investigations have focused attention on the ease with which one or more
high profile brokers or firms could access huge sums of money to play the
market.
This time too the government and the principal regulatory agencies are
seeking to dismiss the revelations as one more “scam”, involving rogue
traders operating in collaboration with unregulated financial institutions
that have access to public savings. The description of the episode as a
scam is facilitated by the fact that, though the investments in government
securities was legitimate, they were made in an unlawful manner. Thus,
they were not made in dematerialised (demat) form through a subsidiary
general ledger account as required, but in physical mode. And some of the
brokers, including Home Trade, had not been recognised fully as brokers
for transactions involving such securities. But with the “physical mode”
transactions not having led to delivery of securities the question as to
where the money went remains. Not clear say the investigating agencies,
but diversion to the stock market for speculative purposes is a “hot”
suspicion. But there is nothing to fear says Sinha, since the event is
unlikely to disturb the financial system and deposits up to Rs. 1 lakh are
insured under the Depositors Credit Insurance Fund Scheme.
The emphasis on events such as these being a scam is not without motives.
It helps detract attention from the fact that there are systemic faults in
India’s increasingly liberalised financial system. Those fault lines allow
agencies authorised to mobilise household savings to divert, in this case
through unlawful transactions involving legitimate investments in
government securities, to cross the walls which separated different areas
of financial activity during the interventionist, pre-reform years.