Key Points

SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey emphasized the regulator's commitment to market integrity through forensic audits. He exposed cases where promoters diverted funds via subsidiaries and inflated financials. Fraudulent preferential allotments and forged documents were also flagged as key concerns. Pandey assured investors SEBI is actively combating these malpractices.

Key Points: SEBI Chief Pandey Vows to Protect Market Integrity Amid Rising Fraud Cases

  • SEBI uncovers frauds via forensic audits in listed companies
  • Promoters siphon funds via related-party transactions
  • Misuse of preferential allotments harms retail investors
  • Forged bank statements used to mislead regulators
3 min read

SEBI dedicated to safeguard market integrity, sustain capital formation: Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey

SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey highlights forensic audits to combat financial frauds, ensuring investor trust and capital formation in Indian markets.

"We must safeguard market integrity, the foundation that fuels investor participation and sustains capital formation. – Tuhin Kanta Pandey"

Mumbai, August 2

The financial frauds in Indian capital markets have ranged from simple diversion of shareholder funds to the use of complex structures and transactions to bypass regulatory safeguards, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SABI) Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Friday.

Addressing the Future Proof Forensics 2025 event held in Mumbai, the SEBI chief highlighted how the market regulator has used forensic audits to uncover several such frauds in recent times.

"We must safeguard market integrity, the foundation that fuels investor participation and sustains capital formation," he said.

Citing examples of egregious cases, Pandey said SEBI investigations have revealed several instances where listed companies engaged in fraudulent practices to siphon off investor funds.

He highlighted that in a case, a listed entity transferred its assets to a subsidiary company.

He said "SEBI has unearthed transactions where the listed entity transferred assets to its subsidiary. The loan obtained by the subsidiary against these assets were then used to repay the outstanding loan of a promoter linked entity".

In another instance, a company inflated its financials by entering into circular transactions with a number of named lending entities. The promoters subsequently siphoned off shareholder funds or assets through related-party transactions under the pretext of purchases or sales made to or from their own companies.

Pandey said SEBI also found that proceeds from preferential allotment, which should result in cash flow to the company, were instead siphoned off.

In one case, the funds raised through preferential allotment were round-tripped back to the allottees themselves using complex, multi-layered transactions.

He added "Forged bank statements were submitted to SEBI to show receipt of funds by the company. The statutory auditor also failed to report the structured circulation of funds".

The SEBI Chairman also warned about the misuse of preferential allotment and misleading disclosures. He said that misleading information is sometimes deliberately made public just before the expiry of the lock-in period on shares issued through preferential allotment.

This enables the preferential allottees to exit at a profit, often at the cost of retail investors who trust the misleading disclosures.

"These are egregious cases. I'm not saying this is a generalised phenomenon. I'm just giving you certain examples of egregious cases which have been detected," Pandey said.

He added that the negative impact of such financial frauds on the securities market is tremendous and SEBI is doing forensic audits to uncover theses kind of financial frauds.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While SEBI's efforts are commendable, why does it take so long to detect these frauds? Retail investors suffer huge losses by then. The system needs more preventive checks rather than forensic audits after the damage is done.
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Ananya R
This is why I only invest in mutual funds now! Direct equity is too risky with all these scams happening. SEBI should impose stricter penalties - jail time for promoters who cheat investors! 🇮🇳
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Vikram M
The auditors need to be held equally responsible. How can they miss such large-scale frauds? SEBI should blacklist audit firms that repeatedly fail in their duties. #InvestorProtection
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Karthik V
Good steps by SEBI but implementation is key. Our markets need both strong regulation AND ethical business practices. Remember Satyam scam? We don't want history repeating itself. Jai Hind!
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Priya S
As a CA student, this is eye-opening! The complexity of these frauds shows why we need better forensic accounting education in India. Maybe SEBI can collaborate with universities to build this expertise.

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