India’s biggest ever bank fraud?

Article credit – Finshots

Ashish Khetan

August 12, 2022

Article credit – Finshots

Source: https://finshots.in/archive/the-biggest-bank-scam-ever/?utm_medium=Whatsapp&utm_source=Email%20Subscribers

In today’s Finshots, we dive into what’s being touted as India’s biggest ever bank fraud

Spoiler alert: It involves the underworld and helicopters!

The Story

In February, there were news reports about a massive bank scam. In fact, the biggest bank scam ever. ABG Shipyard was the alleged perpetrator and reports indicated that the company had cheated nearly 28 banks to the tune of ₹23,000 crores

But ABG Shipyard could only hold the crown for a few short months. They’ve been dethroned by yet another company that seemed to have cheated banks out of nearly ₹35,000 crores.

Who might that be, you ask?

Well, it’s the Wadhawan brothers of DHFL fame!

Remember DHFL?

It was a non-banking financial company (NBFC) that doled out housing loans to lower and middle-income group individuals. They were seemingly doing quite well, until a couple of years ago, when the company collapsed rather spectacularly due to financial mismanagement. The Piramal Group finally acquired DHFL, but the promoters haven’t been offered any respite. The CBI and the Enforcement Directorate are still on their tail and for the Wadhawan brothers, it’s looking a bit grim.

DHFL’s antics

Okay, so it all began during the first half of the last decade. The home loan business was taking off and DHFL found itself in the thick of things. They began doling out home loans in bulk. But if you’re an NBFC, you can’t keep up this kind of growth, unless you borrow large sums of money yourself.

Where does an NBFC borrow this money you ask?

They borrow it from banks. And since DHFL needed a lot of money, a consortium of 17 banks led by Union Bank had to jump in. From 2010 to 2018, they sanctioned nearly ₹43,000 crores to DHFL.

And everything was fine for the most part. But then a stunning investigation by Cobrapost revealed a shady nexus between DHFL’s promoters and a number of shell companies. They claimed that the promoters borrowed money from banks to enrich themselves.

The lenders panicked. They’d given out a lot of money to DHFL and wanted to get to the bottom of this fiasco. So, the Union Bank of India got the pros involved — they hired consulting firm KPMG and demanded a special audit of DHFL’s financial accounts. And well, KPMG found exactly what Cobrapost had claimed. The rot ran deep and a lot of money had indeed gone missing.

We are talking about thousands of crores.

At this point, the banks had very few options left. They couldn’t label these as bad loans anymore. They had to classify it as fraud!!! So the Union Bank of India complained to the CBI last year.

But wait. What did the promoters do with the money?

Well, take for instance, an elaborate scheme called the “Bandra Books”. To perpetrate this scam, DHFL set up a dummy branch that existed only on paper. It was a virtual account carved out in the internal loan management software. They made it seem as if they disbursed home loans to 2.60 lakh individuals.  But instead, they lent out the money— nearly ₹11,000 crores to 91 companies.

What were the antecedents of the 91 companies you ask?

Well, as you may have suspected already, most of them did not have an actual business operation. They were simply a front to route money into the Wadhawans’ own pockets. When the CBI got involved in this investigation recently, they found that the Wadhawans had bought expensive art and luxury properties with this ill-gotten money. And it also seems like some of this money found its way into the underworld and dreaded gangster Chota Shakeel!

Now here’s the thing. This has been in the news cycle for a while now. You could turn around and ask — “Why are we talking about it now?”

Well, that’s because the CBI only filed a case back in June. And it was only then that we had the official stamp of approval from the appropriate authorities  to call this the biggest bank scam ever.

But wait, there’s also some new stuff that emerged recently, involving a helicopter. So let’s try and clear that up for you as well. So far we’ve been talking about DHFL and its many indiscretions. But it seems the promoters also teamed up with another entity to further their dubious objectives.

Enter Yes Bank

It seems DHFL borrowed money from Yes Bank to work on the Bandra Reclamation Project. But the project was a charade. DHFL instead channelled the money to a real estate company called RKW Developers — a firm linked to the Wadhawan Family.

Then last week, as the CBI was painstakingly poring through all the evidence, they chanced upon a helicopter hidden away in a real estate developer’s hangar. They checked the ownership records and a name popped up — Varva Aviation.

Guess who owns a stake in this aviation company?

Why, it’s RKW Developers, of course!

So now the contention is that this money came from Yes Bank and the likes of Union Bank of India. But wait, this doesn’t implicate Yes bank no? If anything, they were defrauded, just like other banks.

But…

There’s also an allegation that Yes Bank’s former CEO Rana Kapoor got kickbacks (a bribe) from the Wadhawans for facilitating this loan. So Rana Kapoor knew exactly what the Wadhawans were up to and yet he looked the other way because he was standing to gain from the transaction.

Or at least that’s the charge.

So yeah, it seems the DHFL saga is far from over and we have to wait and see what other gnarly details pop up in the near future.

Until then…

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