India Mahindra Satyam hit by new charges; outlook uncertain
Mahindra-Satyam
Investors are playing a blind game until the audited numbers are out. There could be more skeletons hidden in the closet, said HDFC Securities' head of private client group V.K. Sharma, who is advising clients to stay away from the stock until there is further clarity.
The stock topped the volume chart, with about 30 million shares traded, nearly three times its average daily volume over the past 90 days. It ended up 2.4 percent at 92.75 rupees.
Mahindra Satyam, earlier known as Satyam Computer Services, was acquired by Tech Mahindra
V. V. Lakshmi Narayana, deputy inspector general of India's Central Bureau of Investigation, told Reuters the extent of the fraud at Satyam could be much larger than the 71.36 billion rupees ($1.5 billion) that founder Ramalinga Raju had confessed to in a letter in January.
All investigations into the accounting and auditing part of the business have been completed, and we are now going to look into the money diversion from the company, Narayana, who is part of the team probing the fraud, said from Hyderabad.
Whatever Raju said is not the complete reality.
Narayana said the agency estimated losses suffered by investors in the wake of the fraud could be up to 140 billion rupees.
Mahindra Satyam, which has about 35,000 employees, hoped to restate its accounts by the middle of next year, Atul Kunwar, president of its global operations, said on Wednesday.
Vaibhav Sanghavi, director of Ambit Capital, said, It's very difficult to assess the situation until the audited numbers are out.
Officials at Mahindra Satyam did not respond to requests by Reuters for comment. A Tech Mahindra spokesman declined comment.
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Kunwar also told the Reuters India Investment Summit on Wednesday that customer attrition had stopped and the company did not need price cuts to win new deals.
On Tuesday, the CBI said it had filed a supplementary charge sheet containing new allegations against Raju and nine others associated with the outsourcing firm.
New charges included that revenues had been inflated by 4.3 billion rupees by creating fake invoices and customers, and that forged board resolutions were used to get loans worth 12.2 billion rupees.
On Thursday, Bharat Kumar, a lawyer for Raju, told Reuters he could not comment as he had not received a copy of the additional charge sheet the investigating agency had submitted to the court.
When he quit in January, Raju, who is in judicial custody, said profits had been falsely inflated for years and assets overstated.
($1=46.2 rupees)
(Additional reporting by Ami Shah; Editing by John Mair and Anshuman Daga)
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