Open Journal of Accounting, 2013, 2, 26-38http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojacct.2013.22006 Published Online April 2013 (http://www.scirp.org/journal/ojacct)
Corporate Accounting Fraud: A Case Study of Satyam
Computers Limited
Madan Lal Bhasin
Bang College of Business, KIMEP University, Almaty, Republic of Kazakhstan
Email: madan.bhasin@rediffmail.com
Received January 15, 2013; revised March 12, 2013; accepted March 28, 2013
Copyright © 2013 Madan Lal Bhasin. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License,
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
ABSTRACT
From Enron, WorldCom and Satyam, it appears that corporate accounting fraud is a major problem that is increasing
both in its frequency and severity. Research evidence has shown that growing number of frauds have undermined the
integrity of financial reports, contributed to substantial economic losses, and eroded investors’ confidence regarding the
usefulness and reliability of financial statements. The increasing rate of white-collar crimes demands stiff penalties,
exemplary punishments, and effective enforcement of law with the right spirit. An attempt is made to examine and analyze in-depth the Satyam Computer’s “creative-accounting” scandal, which brought to limelight the importance of
“ethics and corporate governance” (CG). The fraud committed by the founders of Satyam in 2009, is a testament to the
fact that “the science of conduct is swayed in large by human greed, ambition, and hunger for power, money, fame and
glory”. Unlike Enron, which sank due to “agency” problem, Satyam was brought to its knee due to ‘tunneling’ effect.
The Satyam scandal highlights the importance of securities laws and CG in ‘emerging’ markets. Indeed, Satyam fraud
“spurred the government of India to tighten the CG norms to prevent recurrence of similar frauds in future”. Thus, major financial reporting frauds need to be studied for “lessons-learned” and “strategies-to-follow” to reduce the incidents
of such frauds in the future.
Keywords: Corporate Accounting Frauds; Satyam Computers; Case Study; India; Corporate Governance; Accounting
and Auditing Standards
1. Introduction
1.1. What Is Fraud?
Fraud is a worldwide phenomenon that affects all continents and all sectors of the economy. Fraud encompasses
a wide-range of illicit practices and illegal acts involving
intentional deception, or misrepresentation. According to
the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE),
fraud is “a deception or misrepresentation that an individual or entity makes knowing that misrepresentation
could result in some unauthorized benefit to the individual or to the entity or some other party” [1]. In other
words, mistakes are not fraud. Indeed, in fraud, groups of
unscrupulous individuals manipulate, or influence the
activities of a target business with the intention of making money, or obtaining goods through illegal or unfair
means. Fraud cheats the target organization of its legitimate income and results in a loss of goods, money, and
even goodwill and reputation. Fraud often employs illegal and immoral, or unfair means. It is essential that orCopyright © 2013 SciRes.
ganizations build processes, procedures and controls that
do not needlessly put employees in a position to commit
fraud and that effectively detect fraudulent activity if it
occurs. The fraud involving persons from the leadership
level is known under the name “managerial fraud” and
the one involving only entity’s employees is named
“fraud by employees’ association”.
1.2. Magnitude of Fraud Losses: A Glimpse
Organizations of all types and sizes are subject to fraud.
On a number of occasions over the past few decades,
major public companies have experienced financial reporting fraud, resulting in turmoil in the capital markets,
a loss of shareholder value, and, in some cases, the
bankruptcy of the company itself. Although, it is generally accepted that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has improved
corporate governance and decreased the incidence of
fraud, recent studies and surveys indicate that investors
and management continue to have concerns about financial statement fraud. For example:
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M. L. BHASIN
The ACFE’s “2010 Report to the Nations on Occupational Fraud and Abuse” [1] found that financial
statement fraud, while representing less than five
percent of the cases of fraud in its report, was by far
the most costly, with a median loss of $1.7 million
per incident. Survey participants estimated that the
typical organization loses 5% of its revenues to fraud
each year. Applied to the 2011 Gross World Product,
this figure translates to a potential projected annual
fraud loss of more than $3.5 trillion. The median loss
caused by the occupational fraud cases in our study
was $140,000. More than one-fifth of these cases
caused losses of at least $1 million. The frauds reported to us lasted a median of 18 months before being detected.
“Fraudulent Financial Reporting: 1998-2007”, from
the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the
Treadway Commission (the 2010 COSO Fraud Report) [2], analyzed 347 frauds investigated by the US
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from
1998 to 2007 and found that the median dollar
amount of each instance of fraud had increased three
times from the level in a similar 1999 study, from a
median of $4.1 million in the 1999 study to $12 million. In addition, the median size of the company involved in fraudulent financial reporting increased approximately six-fold, from $16 million to $93 million
in total assets and from $13 million to $72 million in
revenues.
A “2009 KPMG Survey” [3] of 204 executives of US
companies with annual revenues of $250 million or
more found that 65 percent of the respondents considered fraud to be a significant risk to their organizations in the next year, and more than one-third of
those identified financial reporting fraud as one of the
highest risks.
Fifty-six percent of the approximately 2100 business
professionals surveyed during a “Deloitte Forensic
Center” [4] webcast about reducing fraud risk predicted that more financial statement fraud would be
uncovered in 2010 and 2011 as compared to the previous three years. Almost half of those surveyed (46
percent) pointed to the recession as the reason for this
increase.
According to “Annual Fraud Indicator 2012” conducted by the National Fraud Authority (UK) [5],
“The scale of fraud losses in 2012, against all victims
in the UK, is in the region of £73 billion per annum. In
2006, 2010 and 2011, it was £13, £30 and £38 billions,
respectively. The 2012 estimate is significantly greater
than the previous figures because it includes new and
improved estimates in a number of areas, in particular
against the private sector. Fraud harms all areas of the
UK economy”.
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Moreover, financial statement fraud was a contributing
factor to the recent financial crisis and it threatened the
efficiency, liquidity and safety of both debt and capital
markets [6]. Furthermore, it has significantly increased
uncertainty and volatility in financial markets, shaking
investor confidence worldwide. It also reduces the creditability of financial information that investors use in
investment decisions. When taking into account the loss
of investor confidence, as well as, reputational damage
and potential fines and criminal actions, it is clear why
financial misstatements should be every manager’s worst
fraud-related nightmare [7].
1.3. Who Commits Frauds?
Everyday, there are revelations of organizations behaving
in discreditable ways [8]. Generally, there are three
groups of business people who commit financial statement frauds. They range from senior management (CEO
and CFO); mid- and lower-level management and organizational criminals [9]. CEOs and CFOs commit accounting frauds to conceal true business performance, to
preserve personal status and control and to maintain personal income and wealth. Mid- and lower-level employyees falsify financial statements related to their area of
responsibility (subsidiary, division or other unit) to conceal poor performance and/or to earn performance-based
bonuses. Organizational criminals falsify financial statements to obtain loans, or to inflate a stock they plan to
sell in a “pump-and-dump” scheme. While many changes in financial audit processes have stemmed from financial fraud, or manipulations, history and related research repeatedly demonstrates that a financial audit
simply cannot be relied upon to detect fraud at any significant level.
1.4. Consequences of Fraudulent Reporting
Fraudulent financial reporting can have significant consequences for the organization and its stakeholders, as
well as for public confidence in the capital markets. Periodic high-profile cases of fraudulent financial reporting
also raise concerns about the credibility of the US financial reporting process and call into question the roles
of management, auditors, regulators, and analysts, among
others. Moreover, corporate fraud impacts organizations
in several areas: financial, operational and psychological
[10]. While the monetary loss owing to fraud is significant, the full impact of fraud on an organization can be
staggering. In fact, the losses to reputation, goodwill, and
customer relations can be devastating. When fraudulent
financial reporting occurs, serious consequences ensue.
The damage that result is also widespread, with a sometimes devastating “ripple” effect [6]. Those affected may
range from the “immediate” victims (the company’s
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M. L. BHASIN
stockholders and creditors) to the more “remote” (those
harmed when investor confidence in the stock market is
shaken). Between these two extremes, many others may
be affected: “employees” who suffer job loss or diminished pension fund value; “depositors” in financial institutions; the company’s “underwriters, auditors, attorneys,
and insurers”; and even honest “competitors” whose
reputations suffer by association.
As fraud can be perpetrated by any employee within
an organization or by those from the outside, therefore, it
is important to have an effective “fraud management”
program in place to safeguard your organization’s assets
and reputation. Thus, prevention and earlier detection of
fraudulent financial reporting must start with the entity
that prepares financial reports. Given the current state of
the economy and recent corporate scandals, fraud is still
a top concern for corporate executives. In fact, the
sweeping regulations of Sarbanes-Oxley, designed to
help prevent and detect corporate fraud, have exposed
fraudulent practices that previously may have gone undetected. Additionally, more corporate executives are
paying fines and serving prison time than ever before. No
industry is immune to fraudulent situations and the negative publicity that swirls around them. The implications
for management are clear: every organization is vulnerable to fraud, and managers must know how to detect it,
or at least, when to suspect it.
2. Review of Literature
Starting in the late 1990s, a wave of corporate frauds in
the United States occurred with Enron’s failure perhaps
being the emblematic example. Jeffords [11] examined
910 cases of frauds submitted to the “Internal Auditor”
during the nine-year period from 1981 to 1989 to assess
the specific risk factors cited in the Treadway Commission Report. He concluded that “approximately 63 percent of the 910 fraud cases are classified under the internal control risks”. In addition, Smith [12] offered a “typology” of individuals who embezzle. He indicated that
embezzlers are “opportunist’s type”, who quickly detects
the lack of weakness in internal control and seizes the
opportunity to use the deficiency to his benefit. Similarly,
Ziegenfuss [13] performed a study to determine the
amount and type of fraud occurring in “state and local”
governments. His study revealed that the most frequently
occurring types of fraud are misappropriation of assets,
theft, false representation; and false invoice.
On the other hand, Haugen and Selin [14] in their
study discussed the value of “internal” controls, which
depends largely on management’s integrity and the ready
availability of computer technology, which assisted in
the commitment of crime. Sharma and Brahma [15] emphasized on “bankers” responsibility on frauds; bank
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
frauds could crop-up in all spheres of bank’s dealing.
Major cause for perpetration of fraud is laxity in observance in laid-down system and procedures by supervising staff. Harris and William [16], however, examined
the reasons for “loan” frauds in banks and emphasized on
due diligence program. Beirstaker, Brody, Pacini [17] in
their study proposed numerous fraud protection and detection techniques. Moreover, Willison [18] examined
the causes that led to the breakdown of “Barring” Bank.
The collapse resulted due to the failures in management,
financial and operational controls of Baring Banks.
Choo and Tan [19] explained corporate fraud by relating the “fraud-triangle” to the “broken trust theory” and
to an “American Dream” theory, which originates from
the sociological literature, while Schrand and Zechman
[20] relate executive over-confidence to the commitment
of fraud. Moreover, Bhasin [21] examined the reasons
for “check” frauds, the magnitude of frauds in Indian
banks, and the manner, in which the expertise of internal
auditors can be integrated, in order to detect and prevent
frauds in banks by taking “proactive” steps to combat
frauds. Chen [22] in his study examined “unethical” leadership in the companies and compares the role of unethical leaders in a variety of scenarios. Through the use of
computer simulation models, he shows how a combination of CEO’s narcissism, financial incentive, shareholders’ expectations and subordinate silence as well as
CEO’s dishonesty can do much to explain some of the
findings highlighted in recent high-profile financial accounting scandals. According to a research study
performed by Cecchini et al. [23], the authors provided a
methodology for detecting “management” fraud using
basic financial data based on “support vector machines”.
From the above, it is evident that majority of studies
were performed in developed, Western countries. However, the manager’s behavior in fraud commitment has
been relatively unexplored so far. Accordingly, the objective of this paper is to examine managers’ unethical
behaviors in Satyam Computer Limited, which constitute
an ex-post evaluation of alleged or acknowledged fraud
case. Unfortunately, no study has been conducted to examine behavioral aspects of manager’s in the perpetuation of corporate frauds in the context of a developing
economy, like India. Hence, the present study seeks to
fill this gap and contributes to the literature.
3. Research Methodology, Objectives and
Sources of Information
Financial reporting practice can be developed by reference to a particular setting in which it is embedded.
Therefore, “qualitative” research could be seen useful to
explore and describe fraudulent financial reporting practice. Here, two issues are crucial. First, to understand why
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M. L. BHASIN
and how a “specific” company is committed to fraudulent
financial reporting practice an appropriate “interpretive”
research approach is needed. Second, case study conducted as part of this study, looked specifically at the
largest fraud case in India, involving Satyam Computer
Services (Satyam). Labelled as “India’s Enron” by the
Indian media, the Satyam accounting fraud has comprehensively exposed the failure of the regulatory oversight
mechanism in India. No doubt, to design better accounting
systems, we need to understand how accounting systems
operate in their social, political and economic contexts.
The main objectives of this study are to: 1) highlight the
Satyam Computers Limited’s accounting scandal by portraying the sequence of events, the aftermath of events, the
key parties involved, and major follow-up actions undertaken in India; and 2) what lesions can be learned from
Satyam scam?
To complement prior literature, we examined documented behaviors in cases of Satyam corporate scandal,
using the evidence taken from press articles, and also
applied a “content” analysis to them. In terms of information collection “methodology”, we searched for evidence from the press coverage contained in the “Factiva”
database. Thus, present study is primarily based on “secondary” sources of data (EBSCO host database) gathered
from the related literature published in the journals,
newspaper, books, statements, reports. However, as
stated earlier, the nature of study is “primarily qualitative, descriptive and analytical”.
4. Corporate Accounting Scandal at Satyam
Computer Services Limited: A Case
Study of India’s Enron
Ironically, Satyam means “truth” in the ancient Indian
language “Sanskrit” [24]. Satyam won the “Golden Peacock Award” for the best governed company in 2007 and
in 2009. From being India’s IT “crown jewel” and the
country’s “fourth largest” company with high-profile
customers, the outsourcing firm Satyam Computers has
become embroiled in the nation’s biggest corporate scam
in living memory [25]. Mr. Ramalinga Raju (Chairman
and Founder of Satyam; henceforth called “Raju”), who
has been arrested and has confessed to a $1.47 billion (or
Rs. 7800 crore) fraud, admitted that he had made up
profits for years. According to reports, Raju and his
brother, B. Rama Raju, who was the Managing Director,
“hid the deception from the company’s board, senior
managers, and auditors”. The case of Satyam’s accounting fraud has been dubbed as “India’s Enron”. In order to
evaluate and understand the severity of Satyam’s fraud, it
is important to understand factors that contributed to the
“unethical” decisions made by the company’s executives.
First, it is necessary to detail the rise of Satyam as a
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competitor within the global IT services market-place.
Second, it is helpful to evaluate the driving-forces behind
Satyam’s decisions: Ramalinga Raju. Finally, attempt to
learn some “lessons” from Satyam fraud for the future.
4.1. Emergence of Satyam Computer Services
Limited
Satyam Computer Services Limited was a “rising-star” in
the Indian “outsourced” IT-services industry. The company was formed in 1987 in Hyderabad (India) by Mr.
Ramalinga Raju. The firm began with 20 employees and
grew rapidly as a “global” business. It offered IT and
business process outsourcing services spanning various
sectors. Satyam was as an example of “India’s growing
success”. Satyam won numerous awards for innovation,
governance, and corporate accountability. “In 2007, Ernst
& Young awarded Mr. Raju with the ‘Entrepreneur of the
Year’ award. On April 14, 2008, Satyam won awards
from MZ Consult’s for being a ‘leader in India in CG and
accountability’. In September 2008, the World Council
for Corporate Governance awarded Satyam with the
‘Global Peacock Award’ for global excellence in corporate accountability” [26]. Unfortunately, less than five
months after winning the Global Peacock Award, Satyam
became the centerpiece of a “massive” accounting fraud.
By 2003, Satyam’s IT services businesses included
13,120 technical associates servicing over 300 customers
worldwide. At that time, the world-wide IT services
market was estimated at nearly $400 billion, with an estimated annual compound growth rate of 6.4%. “The
markets major drivers at that point in time were the increased importance of IT services to businesses worldwide; the impact of the Internet on eBusiness; the emergence of a high‐quality IT services industry in India and
their methodologies; and, the growing need of IT services providers who could provide a range of services”.
To effectively compete, both against domestic and global
competitors, the company embarked on a variety of
multi‐pronged business growth strategies.
From 2003-2008, in nearly all financial metrics of interest to investors, the company grew measurably. Satyam generated USD $467 million in total sales. By
March 2008, the company had grown to USD $2.1 billion. The company demonstrated “an annual compound
growth rate of 35% over that period”. Operating profits
averaged 21%. Earnings per share similarly grew, from
$0.12 to $0.62, at a compound annual growth rate of 40%.
Over the same period (2003‐2009), the company was
trading at an average trailing EBITDA multiple of 15.36.
Finally, beginning in January 2003, at a share price of
138.08 INR, Satyam’s stock would peak at 526.25
INR—a 300% improvement in share price after nearly
five years. Satyam clearly generated significant corporate
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M. L. BHASIN
growth and shareholder value. The company was a leading star—and a recognizable name—in a global IT marketplace. The external environment in which Satyam
operated was indeed beneficial to the company’s growth.
But, the numbers did not represent the full picture. The
case of Satyam accounting fraud has been dubbed as
“India’s Enron”.
4.2. Mr. Ramalinga Raju and the Satyam Scandal
On January 7, 2009, Mr. Raju disclosed in a letter (see
Annexure) to Satyam Computers Limited Board of Directors that “he had been manipulating the company’s
accounting numbers for years”. Mr. Raju claimed that he
overstated assets on Satyam’s balance sheet by $1.47
billion. Nearly $1.04 billion in bank loans and cash that
the company claimed to own was non-existent. Satyam
also underreported liabilities on its balance sheet. Satyam
overstated income nearly every quarter over the course of
several years in order to meet analyst expectations. For
example, the results announced on October 17, 2009
overstated quarterly revenues by 75 percent and profits by
97 percent. Mr. Raju and the company’s global head of
internal audit used a number of different techniques to
perpetrate the fraud. “Using his personal computer, Mr.
Raju created numerous bank statements to advance the
fraud. Mr. Raju falsified the bank accounts to inflate the
balance sheet with balances that did not exist. He inflated
the income statement by claiming interest income from
the fake bank accounts. Mr. Raju also revealed that he
created 6000 fake salary accounts over the past few years
and appropriated the money after the company deposited
it. The company’s global head of internal audit created
fake customer identities and generated fake invoices
against their names to inflate revenue. The global head of
internal audit also forged board resolutions and illegally
obtained loans for the company” [27]. It also appeared
that the cash that the company raised through American
Depository Receipts in the United States never made it to
the balance sheets.
Greed for money, power, competition, success and
prestige compelled Mr. Raju to “ride the tiger”, which led
to violation of all duties imposed on them as fiduciaries—the duty of care, the duty of negligence, the duty of
loyalty, the duty of disclosure towards the stakeholders.
“The Satyam scandal is a classic case of negligence of
fiduciary duties, total collapse of ethical standards, and a
lack of corporate social responsibility. It is human greed
and desire that led to fraud. This type of behavior can be
traced to: greed overshadowing the responsibility to meet
fiduciary duties; fierce competition and the need to impress stakeholders especially investors, analysts, shareholders, and the stock market; low ethical and moral
standards by top management; and, greater emphasis on
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
short‐term performance” [28]. According to CBI, the Indian crime investigation agency, the fraud activity dates
back from April 1999, when the company embarked on a
road to double-digit annual growth. As of December 2008,
Satyam had a total market capitalization of $3.2 billion
dollars.
Satyam planned to acquire a 51% stake in Maytas Infrastructure Limited, a leading infrastructure development, construction and project management company,
for $300 million. Here, the Rajus’s had a 37% stake. The
total turnover was $350 million and a net profit of $20
million. Raju’s also had a 35% share in Maytas Properties, another real-estate investment firm. Satyam revenues exceeded $1 billion in 2006. In April, 2008 Satyam
became the first Indian company to publish IFRS audited
financials. On December 16, 2008, the Satyam board,
including its five independent directors had approved the
founder’s proposal to buy the stake in Maytas Infrastructure and all of Maytas Properties, which were owned by
family members of Satyam’s Chairman, Ramalinga Raju,
as fully owned subsidiary for $1.6 billion. Without
shareholder approval, the directors went ahead with the
management’s decision. The decision of acquisition was,
however, reversed twelve hours after investors sold Satyam’s stock and threatened action against the management. This was followed by the law-suits filed in the US
contesting Maytas deal. The World Bank banned Satyam
from conducting business for 8 years due to inappropriate payments to staff and inability to provide information
sought on invoices. Four independent directors quit the
Satyam board and SEBI ordered promoters to disclose
pledged shares to stock exchange.
Investment bank DSP Merrill Lynch, which was appointed by Satyam to look for a partner or buyer for the
company, ultimately blew the whistle and terminated its
engagement with the company soon after it found financial irregularities [29]. On 7 January 2009, Saytam’s
Chairman, Ramalinga Raju, resigned after notifying
board members and the Securities and Exchange Board
of India (SEBI) that Satyam’s accounts had been falsified.
Raju confessed that Satyam’s balance sheet of September
30, 2008, contained the following irregularies: “He faked
figures to the extent of Rs. 5040 crore of non-existent
cash and bank balances as against Rs. 5361 crore in the
books, accrued interest of Rs. 376 crore (non-existent),
understated liability of Rs. 1230 crore on account of
funds raised by Raju, and an overstated debtor’s position
of Rs. 490 crore. He accepted that Satyam had reported
revenue of Rs. 2700 crore and an operating margin of Rs.
649 crore, while the actual revenue was Rs. 2112 crore
and the margin was Rs. 61 crore”. In other words, Raju:
1) inflated figures for cash and bank balances of US
$1.04 billion vs. US $1.1 billion reflected in the books; 2)
an accrued interest of US $77.46 million which was nonOJAcct
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existent; 3) an understated liability of US $253.38 million on account of funds was arranged by himself; and 4)
an overstated debtors’ position of US $100.94 million vs.
US $546.11 million in the books.
Raju claimed in the same letter that “neither he nor the
managing director had benefited financially from the
inflated revenues, and none of the board members had
any knowledge of the situation in which the company
was placed”. The fraud took place to divert company
funds into real-estate investment, keep high earnings per
share, raise executive compensation, and make huge
profits by selling stake at inflated price. The gap in the
balance sheet had arisen purely on account of inflated
profits over a period that lasted several years starting in
April 1999. “What accounted as a marginal gap between
actual operating profit and the one reflected in the books
of accounts continued to grow over the years. This gap
reached unmanageable proportions as company operations grew significantly”, Ragu explained in his letter to
the board and shareholders. He went on to explain,
“Every attempt to eliminate the gap failed, and the
aborted Maytas acquisition deal was the last attempt to
fill the fictitious assets with real ones. But the investors
thought it was a brazen attempt to siphon cash out of
Satyam, in which the Raju family held a small stake, into
firms the family held tightly”. Table 1 depicts some parts
of the Satyam’s fabricated ‘Balance Sheet and Income
Statement’ and shows the “difference” between “actual”
and “reported” finances.
Fortunately, the Satyam deal with Matyas was “salvageable”. It could have been saved only if “the deal had
been allowed to go through, as Satyam would have been
able to use Maytas’ assets to shore up its own books”.
Raju, who showed “artificial” cash on his books, had
planned to use this “non-existent” cash to acquire the two
Maytas companies. As part of their “tunneling” strategy,
the Satyam promoters had substantially reduced their
holdings in company from 25.6% in March 2001 to
8.74% in March 2008. Furthermore, as the promoters
held a very small percentage of equity (mere 2.18%) on
December 2008, as shown in Table 2, the concern was
that poor performance would result in a takeover bid,
thereby exposing the gap. It was like “riding a tiger, not
knowing how to get off without being eaten”. The
aborted Maytas acquisition deal was the final, desperate
effort to cover up the accounting fraud by bringing some
real assets into the business. When that failed, Raju confessed the fraud. Given the stake the Rajus held in Matyas, pursuing the deal would not have been terribly difficult from the perspective of the Raju family. Unlike
Enron, which sank due to agency problem, Satyam was
brought to its knee due to tunneling. The company with a
huge cash pile, with promoters still controlling it with a
small per cent of shares (less than 3%), and trying to abCopyright © 2013 SciRes.
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Table 1. Fabricated balance sheet and income statement of
Satyam: as of September 30, 2008.
Items Rs. in crore
Actual
Reported
Difference
Cash and Bank
Balances
321
5361
5040
Accrued Interest on
Bank Fixed Deposits
Nil
376.5
376
Understated Liability
1230
None
1230
Overstated Debtors
2161
2651
490
Total
Nil
Nil
7136
Revenues (Q2 FY 2009)
2112
2700
588
Operating Profits
61
649
588
Table 2. Promoter’s shareholding pattern in Satyam from
2001 to 2008.
As on
Promoter’s holding in %
March 2001
25.6
2002
22.26
2003
20.74
2004
17.35
2005
15.67
2006
14.02
2007
8.79
2008
8.74
Dec. 2008
2.18
sorb a real-estate company in which they have a majority
stake is a deadly combination pointing prima facie to
tunneling [30]. The reason why Ramalinga Raju claims
that he did it was because every year he was fudging
revenue figures and since expenditure figures could not
be fudged so easily, the gap between “actual” profit and
“book” profit got widened every year. In order to close
this gap, he had to buy Maytas Infrastructure and Maytas
Properties. In this way, “fictitious” profits could be absorbed through a “self-dealing” process. The auditors,
bankers, and SEBI, the market watchdog, were all
blamed for their role in the accounting fraud.
4.3. The Auditors Role and Factors Contributing
to Fraud
Global auditing firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC),
audited Satyam’s books from June 2000 until the discovery of the fraud in 2009. Several commentators criticized
PwC harshly for failing to detect the fraud. Indeed, PwC
signed Satyam’s financial statements and was responsible
for the numbers under the Indian law. One particularly
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troubling item concerned the $1.04 billion that Satyam
claimed to have on its balance sheet in “non-interestbearing” deposits. According to accounting professionals,
“any reasonable company would have either invested the
money into an interest-bearing account, or returned the
excess cash to the shareholders. The large amount of cash
thus should have been a ‘red-flag’ for the auditors that
further verification and testing was necessary. Furthermore, it appears that the auditors did not independently
verify with the banks in which Satyam claimed to have
deposits”.
Additionally, the Satyam fraud went on for a number of
years and involved both the manipulation of balance
sheets and income statements. Whenever Satyam needed
more income to meet analyst estimates, it simply created
“fictitious” sources and it did so numerous times, without
the auditors ever discovering the fraud. Suspiciously,
Satyam also paid PwC twice what other firms would
charge for the audit, which raises questions about whether
PwC was complicit in the fraud. Furthermore, PwC audited the company for nearly 9 years and did not uncover
the fraud, whereas Merrill Lynch discovered the fraud as
part of its due diligence in merely 10 days. Missing these
“red-flags” implied either that the auditors were grossly
inept or in collusion with the company in committing the
fraud. PWC initially asserted that it performed all of the
company’s audits in accordance with applicable auditing
standards.
Numerous factored contributed to the Satyam fraud.
The independent board members of Satyam, the institutional investor community, the SEBI, retail investors, and
the external auditor—none of them, including professional investors with detailed information and models
available to them, detected the malfeasance. The following is a list of factors that contributed to the fraud: greed,
ambitious corporate growth, deceptive reporting practices—lack of transparency, excessive interest in maintaining stock prices, executive incentives, stock market
expectations, nature of accounting rules, ESOPs issued to
those who prepared fake bills, high risk deals that went
sour, audit failures (internal and external), aggressiveness
of investment and commercial banks, rating agencies and
investors, weak independent directors and audit committee, and whistle-blower policy not being effective.
4.4. Aftermath of Satyam Scandal
Immediately following the news of the fraud, Merrill
Lynch terminated its engagement with Satyam, Credit
Suisse suspended its coverage of Satyam, and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) came under intense scrutiny and
its license to operate was revoked. Coveted awards won
by Satyam and its executive management were stripped
from the company. Satyam’s shares fell to 11.50 rupees
on January 10, 2009, their lowest level since March 1998,
compared to a high of 544 rupees in 2008. In the New
York Stock Exchange, Satyam shares peaked in 2008 at
US $ 29.10; by March 2009 they were trading around US
$1.80. Thus, investors lost $2.82 billion in Satyam. Unfortunately, Satyam significantly inflated its earnings and
assets for years and rolling down Indian stock markets
and throwing the industry into turmoil [31]. Criminal
charges were brought against Mr. Raju, including:
criminal conspiracy, breach of trust, and forgery. After
the Satyam fiasco and the role played by PwC, investors
became wary of those companies who are clients of PwC,
which resulted in fall in share prices of around 100 companies varying between 5% – 15%. The news of the
scandal (quickly compared with the collapse of Enron)
sent jitters through the Indian stock market, and the
benchmark Sensex index fell more than 5%. Shares in
Satyam fell more than 70%. The chart titled as “Fall from
grace”, shown in Exhibit 1 depicts the Satyam’s stock
decline between December 2008 and January 2009.
Immediately after Raju’s revelation about the accounting fraud, “new” board members were appointed
and they started working towards a solution that would
prevent the total collapse of the firm. Indian officials
acted quickly to try to save Satyam from the same fate
that met Enron and WorldCom, when they experienced
large accounting scandals. The Indian government “immediately started an investigation, while at the same time
limiting its direct participation, with Satyam because it
did not want to appear like it was responsible for the
Exhibit 1. Stock Charting of Satyam from December 2008 to January 2009.
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
OJAcct
M. L. BHASIN
fraud, or attempting to cover up the fraud”. The government appointed a “new” board of directors for Satyam to
try to save the company. The Board’s goal was “to sell the
company within 100 days”. To devise a plan of sale, the
board met with bankers, accountants, lawyers, and government officials immediately. It worked diligently to
bring stability and confidence back to the company to
ensure the sale of the company within the 100-day time
frame. To accomplish the sale, the board hired Goldman
Sachs and Avendus Capital and charged them with selling
the company in the shortest time possible.
By mid-March, several major players in the IT field had
gained enough confidence in Satyam’s operations to participate in an auction process for Satyam. The Securities
and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) appointed a retired
Supreme Court Justice, Justice Bharucha, to oversee the
process and instill confidence in the transaction. Several
companies bid on Satyam on April 13, 2009. The winning
bidder, Tech Mahindra, bought Satyam for $1.13 per
share—less than a third of its stock market value before
Mr. Raju revealed the fraud—and salvaged its operations
[32]. Both Tech Mahindra and the SEBI are now fully
aware of the full extent of the fraud and India will not
pursue further investigations. The stock has again stabilized from its fall on November 26, 2009 and, as part of
Tech Mahindra, Saytam is once again on its way toward a
bright future.
4.5. Investigation: Criminal and Civil Charges
The investigation that followed the revelation of the fraud
has led to charges against several different groups of
people involved with Satyam. Indian authorities arrested
Mr. Raju, Mr. Raju’s brother, B. Ramu Raju, its former
managing director, Srinivas Vdlamani, the company’s
head of internal audit, and its CFO on criminal charges of
fraud. Indian authorities also arrested and charged several
of the company’s auditors (PwC) with fraud. The Institute
of Chartered Accountants of India [33] ruled that “the
CFO and the auditor were guilty of professional misconduct”. The CBI is also in the course of investigating the
CEO’s overseas assets. There were also several civil
charges filed in the US against Satyam by the holders of
its ADRs. The investigation also implicated several Indian
politicians. Both civil and criminal litigation cases continue in India and civil litigation continues in the United
States. Some of the main victims were: employees, clients,
shareholders, bankers and Indian government.
In the aftermath of Satyam, India’s markets recovered
and Satyam now lives on. India’s stock market is currently
trading near record highs, as it appears that a global economic recovery is taking place. Civil litigation and
criminal charges continue against Satyam. Tech Mahindra
purchased 51% of Satyam on April 16, 2009, successfully
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
33
saving the firm from a complete collapse. With the right
changes, India can minimize the rate and size of accounting fraud in the Indian capital markets.
4.6. Corporate Governance Issues at Satyam
On a quarterly basis, Satyam earnings grew. Mr. Raju
admitted that the fraud which he committed amounted to
nearly $276 million. In the process, Satyam grossly violated all rules of corporate governance [34]. The Satyam
scam had been the example for following “poor” CG
practices. It had failed to show good relation with the
shareholders and employees. CG issue at Satyam arose
because of non-fulfillment of obligation of the company
towards the various stakeholders. Of specific interest are
the following: distinguishing the roles of board and
management; separation of the roles of the CEO and
chairman; appointment to the board; directors and executive compensation; protection of shareholders rights and
their executives.
4.7. Lessons Learned from Satyam Scam
The 2009 Satyam scandal in India highlighted the nefarious potential of an improperly governed corporate
leader. As the fallout continues, and the effects were felt
throughout the global economy, the prevailing hope is
that some good can come from the scandal in terms of
lessons learned [35]. Here are some lessons learned from
the Satyam Scandal:
Investigate All Inaccuracies: The fraud scheme at
Satyam started very small, eventually growing into
$276 million white-elephant in the room. Indeed, a lot
of fraud schemes initially start out small, with the
perpetrator thinking that small changes here and there
would not make a big difference, and is less likely to
be detected. This sends a message to a lot of companies: if your accounts are not balancing, or if
something seems inaccurate (even just a tiny bit), it is
worth investigating. Dividing responsibilities across a
team of people makes it easier to detect irregularities
or misappropriated funds.
Ruined Reputations: Fraud does not just look bad on
a company; it looks bad on the whole industry and a
country. “India’s biggest corporate scandal in
memory threatens future foreign investment flows
into Asia’s third largest economy and casts a cloud
over growth in its once-booming outsourcing sector.
The news sent Indian equity markets into a tail-spin,
with Bombay’s main benchmark index tumbling
7.3% and the Indian rupee fell”. Now, because of the
Satyam scandal, Indian rivals will come under greater
scrutiny by the regulators, investors and customers.
Corporate Governance Needs to Be Stronger: The
Satyam case is just another example supporting the
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34
M. L. BHASIN
need for stronger CG. All public-companies must be
careful when selecting executives and top-level
managers. These are the people who set the tone for
the company: if there is corruption at the top, it is
bound to trickle-down. Also, separate the role of CEO
and Chairman of the Board. Splitting up the roles,
thus, helps avoid situations like the one at Satyam.
The Satyam Computer Services’ scandal brought to
light the importance of ethics and its relevance to corporate culture. The fraud committed by the founders of
Satyam is a testament to the fact that “the science of
conduct” is swayed in large by human greed, ambition,
and hunger for power, money, fame and glory.
5. Conclusions
Recent corporate frauds and the outcry for transparency
and honesty in reporting have given rise to two outcomes.
First, forensic accounting skills have become very crucial
in untangling the complicated accounting maneuvers that
have obfuscated financial statements. Second, public
demand for change and subsequent regulatory action has
transformed CG scenario across the globe. In fact, both
these trends have the common goal of addressing the
investors’ concerns about the transparent financial reporting system. The failure of the corporate communication structure, therefore, has made the financial community realize that “there is a great need for skilled professionals that can identify, expose, and prevent structural
weaknesses in three key areas: poor corporate governance, flawed internal controls, and fraudulent financial
statements [36]. In addition, the CG framework needs to
be first of all strengthened and then implemented in “letter as well as in right spirit”. The increasing rate of
white-collar crimes, without doubt, demands stiff penalties and punishments.
Perhaps, no financial fraud had a greater impact on
accounting and auditing profession than Enron, WorldCom, and recently, India’s Enron: “Satyam”. All these
frauds have led to the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
in July 2002, and a new federal agency and financial
standard-setting body, the Public Companies Accounting
Oversight Board (PCAOB). It also was the impetus for
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants’
(AICPA) adoption of SAS No. 99, “Consideration of
Fraud in a Financial Statement Audit” [37]. But it may be
that the greatest impact of Enron and WorldCom was in
the significant increased focus and awareness related to
fraud. It establishes external auditors’ responsibility to
plan and perform audits to provide a reasonable assurance that the audited financial statements are free of material frauds.
As part of this research study, one of the key objectives
was “to examine and analyze in-depth the Satyam ComCopyright © 2013 SciRes.
puters Limited’s accounting scandal by portraying the
sequence of events, the aftermath of events, the key parties involved, major reforms undertaken in India, and
learn some lessons from it”. Unlike Enron, which sank
due to “agency” problem, Satyam was brought to its knee
due to “tunneling”. The Satyam scandal highlights the
importance of securities laws and CG in emerging markets. There is a broad consensus that emerging market
countries must strive to create a regulatory environment
in their securities markets that fosters effective CG. India
has managed its transition into a global economy well,
and although it suffers from CG issues, it is not alone as
both developed countries and emerging countries experience accounting and CG scandals. The Satyam scandal brought to light, once again, the importance of ethics
and its relevance to corporate culture. The fraud committed by the founders of Satyam is a testament to the
fact that “the science of conduct is swayed in large by
human greed, ambition, and hunger for power, money,
fame and glory”. All kind of scandals/frauds have proven
that there is a need for good conduct based on strong
ethics. The Indian government, in Satyam case, took very
quick actions to protect the interest of the investors,
safeguard the credibility of India, and the nation’s image
across the world. Moreover, Satyam fraud has forced the
government to re-write CG rules and tightened the norms
for auditors and accountants. The Indian affiliate of PwC
“routinely failed to follow the most basic audit procedures. The SEC and the PCAOB fined the affiliate, PwC
India, $7.5 million which was described as the largest
American penalty ever against a foreign accounting firm”
[38]. According to President, ICAI (January 25, 2011),
“The Satyam scam was not an accounting or auditing
failure, but one of CG. This apex body had found the two
PWC auditors prima-facie guilty of professional misconduct”. The CBI, which investigated the Satyam fraud
case, also charged the two auditors with “complicity in
the commission of the fraud by consciously overlooking
the accounting irregularities”.
The culture at Satyam, especially dominated by the
board, symbolized an unethical culture. On one hand, his
rise to stardom in the corporate world, coupled with immense pressure to impress investors, made Mr. Raju a
“compelled leader to deliver outstanding results”. On the
contrary, Mr. Raju had to suppress his own morals and
values in favor of the greater good of the company. The
board connived with his actions and stood as a blind
spectator; the lure of big compensation to members further encouraged such behavior. But, in the end, truth is
sought and those violating the legal, ethical, and societal
norms are taken to task as per process of law. The public
confession of fraud by Mr. Ramalinga Raju speaks of
integrity still left in him as an individual. His acceptance
of guilt and blame for the whole fiasco shows a bright
OJAcct
M. L. BHASIN
spot of an otherwise “tampered” character. After quitting
as Satyam’s Chairman, Raju said, “I am now prepared to
subject myself to the laws of land and face consequences
thereof”. Mr. Raju had many ethical dilemmas to face,
but his persistent immoral reasoning brought his own
demise. The fraud finally had to end and the implications
were having far reaching consequences. Thus, Satyam
scam was not an accounting or auditing failure, but one
of CG. Undoubtedly, the government of India took
prompt actions to protect the interest of the investors and
safeguard the credibility of India and the nation’s image
across the world. In addition, the CG framework needs to
be strengthened, implemented both in “letter as well as in
right spirit”, and enforced vigorously to curb white-collar
crimes.
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M. L. BHASIN
Annexure: Satyam’s Founder, Chairman
and CEO, Mr. Raju’s Letter to His Board of
Directors
To The Board of Directors,
Satyam Computer Services Ltd.
From: B. Ramalinga Raju
Chairman, Satyam Computer Services Ltd.
January 7, 2009
Dear Board Members,
It is with deep regret, and tremendous burden that I am
carrying on my conscience, that I would like to bring the
following facts to your notice:
1) The Balance Sheet carries as of September 30,
2008:
a) Inflated (non-existent) cash and bank balances of Rs.
5040 crore (as against Rs. 5361 crore reflected in the
books); b) An accrued interest of Rs. 376 crore which is
non-existent; c) An understated liability of Rs. 1230
crore on account of funds arranged by me; and d) An
over stated debtors position of Rs. 490 crore (as against
Rs. 2651 reflected in the books).
2) For the September quarter (Q2), we reported a
revenue of Rs. 2700 crore and an operating margin of Rs.
649 crore (24% of revenues) as against the actual revenues of Rs. 2112 crore and an actual operating margin of
Rs. 61 crore (3% of revenues). This has resulted in artificial cash and bank balances going up by Rs. 588 crore in
Q2 alone.
The gap in the Balance Sheet has arisen purely on account of inflated profits over a period of last several
years (limited only to Satyam standalone, books of subsidiaries reflecting true performance). What started as a
marginal gap between actual operating profit and the one
reflected in the books of accounts continued to grow over
the years. It has attained unmanageable proportions as
the size of company operations grew significantly (annualized revenue run rate of Rs. 11,276 crore in the September quarter, 2008 and official reserves of Rs. 8392
crore). The differential in the real profits and the one
reflected in the books was further accentuated by the fact
that the company had to carry additional resources and
assets to justify higher level of operations—thereby significantly increasing the costs.
Every attempt made to eliminate the gap failed. As the
promoters held a small percentage of equity, the concern
was that poor performance would result in a take-over,
thereby exposing the gap. It was like riding a tiger, not
knowing how to get off without being eaten.
The aborted Maytas acquisition deal was the last attempt to fill the fictitious assets with real ones. Maytas’
investors were convinced that this is a good divestment
opportunity and a strategic fit. Once Satyam’s problem
was solved, it was hoped that Maytas’ payments can be
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
37
delayed. But that was not to be. What followed in the last
several days is common knowledge.
I would like the Board to know:
1) That neither myself, nor the Managing Director (including our spouses) sold any shares in the last eight
years—excepting for a small proportion declared and
sold for philanthropic purposes.
2) That in the last two years a net amount of Rs. 1230
crore was arranged to Satyam (not reflected in the books
of Satyam) to keep the operations going by resorting to
pledging all the promoter shares and raising funds from
known sources by giving all kinds of assurances (Statement enclosed, only to the members of the board). Significant dividend payments, acquisitions, capital expenditure to provide for growth did not help matters. Every
attempt was made to keep the wheel moving and to ensure prompt payment of salaries to the associates. The
last straw was the selling of most of the pledged share by
the lenders on account of margin triggers.
3) That neither me, nor the Managing Director took
even one rupee/dollar from the company and have not
benefited in financial terms on account of the inflated
results.
4) None of the board members, past or present, had
any knowledge of the situation in which the company is
placed. Even business leaders and senior executives in
the company, such as, Ram Mynampati, Subu D., T. R.
Anand, Keshab Panda, Virender Agarwal, A. S. Murthy,
Hari T., S. V. Krishnan, Vijay Prasad, Manish Mehta,
Murali V., Sriram Papani, Kiran Kavale, Joe Lagioia,
Ravindra Penumetsa, Jayaraman and Prabhakar Gupta
are unaware of the real situation as against the books of
accounts. None of my or Managing Director’s immediate
or extended family members has any idea about these
issues.
Having put these facts before you, I leave it to the
wisdom of the board to take the matters forward. However, I am also taking the liberty to recommend the following steps:
1) A Task Force has been formed in the last few days
to address the situation arising out of the failed Maytas
acquisition attempt. This consists of some of the most
accomplished leaders of Satyam: Subu D., T. R. Anand,
Keshab Panda and Virender Agarwal, representing business functions, and A. S. Murthy, Hari T. and Murali V.
representing support functions. I suggest that Ram Mynampati be made the Chairman of this Task Force to
immediately address some of the operational matters on
hand. Ram can also act as an interim CEO reporting to
the board.
2) Merrill Lynch can be entrusted with the task of
quickly exploring some Merger opportunities.
3) You may have a “restatement of accounts” prepared
by the auditors in light of the facts that I have placed
OJAcct
38
M. L. BHASIN
before you. I have promoted and have been associated
with Satyam for well over twenty years now. I have seen
it grow from few people to 53,000 people, with 185 Fortune 500 companies as customers and operations in 66
countries. Satyam has established an excellent leadership
and competency base at all levels. I sincerely apologize
to all Satyamites and stakeholders, who have made Satyam a special organization, for the current situation. I am
confident they will stand by the company in this hour of
crisis. In light of the above, I fervently appeal to the
board to hold together to take some important steps. Mr.
T. R. Prasad is well placed to mobilize support from the
government at this crucial time. With the hope that
members of the Task Force and the financial advisor,
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
Merrill Lynch (now Bank of America) will stand by the
company at this crucial hour, I am marking copies of this
statement to them as well.
Under the circumstances, I am tendering my resignation as the chairman of Satyam and shall continue in this
position only till such time the current board is expanded.
My continuance is just to ensure enhancement of the
board over the next several days or as early as possible.
I am now prepared to subject myself to the laws of the
land and face consequences thereof.
Signature
(B. Ramalinga Raju)
(Source: Bombay Stock Exchange; Security and Exchange Board of India, available at www.sebi.gov.in)
OJAcct
Open Journal of Accounting, 2013, 2, 26-38
http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojacct.2013.22006 Published Online April 2013 (http://www.scirp.org/journal/ojacct)
Corporate Accounting Fraud: A Case Study of Satyam
Computers Limited
Madan Lal Bhasin
Bang College of Business, KIMEP University, Almaty, Republic of Kazakhstan
Email: madan.bhasin@rediffmail.com
Received January 15, 2013; revised March 12, 2013; accepted March 28, 2013
Copyright © 2013 Madan Lal Bhasin. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License,
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
ABSTRACT
From Enron, WorldCom and Satyam, it appears that corporate accounting fraud is a major problem that is increasing
both in its frequency and severity. Research evidence has shown that growing number of frauds have undermined the
integrity of financial reports, contributed to substantial economic losses, and eroded investors’ confidence regarding the
usefulness and reliability of financial statements. The increasing rate of white-collar crimes demands stiff penalties,
exemplary punishments, and effective enforcement of law with the right spirit. An attempt is made to examine and analyze in-depth the Satyam Computer’s “creative-accounting” scandal, which brought to limelight the importance of
“ethics and corporate governance” (CG). The fraud committed by the founders of Satyam in 2009, is a testament to the
fact that “the science of conduct is swayed in large by human greed, ambition, and hunger for power, money, fame and
glory”. Unlike Enron, which sank due to “agency” problem, Satyam was brought to its knee due to ‘tunneling’ effect.
The Satyam scandal highlights the importance of securities laws and CG in ‘emerging’ markets. Indeed, Satyam fraud
“spurred the government of India to tighten the CG norms to prevent recurrence of similar frauds in future”. Thus, major financial reporting frauds need to be studied for “lessons-learned” and “strategies-to-follow” to reduce the incidents
of such frauds in the future.
Keywords: Corporate Accounting Frauds; Satyam Computers; Case Study; India; Corporate Governance; Accounting
and Auditing Standards
1. Introduction
1.1. What Is Fraud?
Fraud is a worldwide phenomenon that affects all continents and all sectors of the economy. Fraud encompasses
a wide-range of illicit practices and illegal acts involving
intentional deception, or misrepresentation. According to
the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE),
fraud is “a deception or misrepresentation that an individual or entity makes knowing that misrepresentation
could result in some unauthorized benefit to the individual or to the entity or some other party” [1]. In other
words, mistakes are not fraud. Indeed, in fraud, groups of
unscrupulous individuals manipulate, or influence the
activities of a target business with the intention of making money, or obtaining goods through illegal or unfair
means. Fraud cheats the target organization of its legitimate income and results in a loss of goods, money, and
even goodwill and reputation. Fraud often employs illegal and immoral, or unfair means. It is essential that orCopyright © 2013 SciRes.
ganizations build processes, procedures and controls that
do not needlessly put employees in a position to commit
fraud and that effectively detect fraudulent activity if it
occurs. The fraud involving persons from the leadership
level is known under the name “managerial fraud” and
the one involving only entity’s employees is named
“fraud by employees’ association”.
1.2. Magnitude of Fraud Losses: A Glimpse
Organizations of all types and sizes are subject to fraud.
On a number of occasions over the past few decades,
major public companies have experienced financial reporting fraud, resulting in turmoil in the capital markets,
a loss of shareholder value, and, in some cases, the
bankruptcy of the company itself. Although, it is generally accepted that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has improved
corporate governance and decreased the incidence of
fraud, recent studies and surveys indicate that investors
and management continue to have concerns about financial statement fraud. For example:
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M. L. BHASIN
The ACFE’s “2010 Report to the Nations on Occupational Fraud and Abuse” [1] found that financial
statement fraud, while representing less than five
percent of the cases of fraud in its report, was by far
the most costly, with a median loss of $1.7 million
per incident. Survey participants estimated that the
typical organization loses 5% of its revenues to fraud
each year. Applied to the 2011 Gross World Product,
this figure translates to a potential projected annual
fraud loss of more than $3.5 trillion. The median loss
caused by the occupational fraud cases in our study
was $140,000. More than one-fifth of these cases
caused losses of at least $1 million. The frauds reported to us lasted a median of 18 months before being detected.
“Fraudulent Financial Reporting: 1998-2007”, from
the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the
Treadway Commission (the 2010 COSO Fraud Report) [2], analyzed 347 frauds investigated by the US
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from
1998 to 2007 and found that the median dollar
amount of each instance of fraud had increased three
times from the level in a similar 1999 study, from a
median of $4.1 million in the 1999 study to $12 million. In addition, the median size of the company involved in fraudulent financial reporting increased approximately six-fold, from $16 million to $93 million
in total assets and from $13 million to $72 million in
revenues.
A “2009 KPMG Survey” [3] of 204 executives of US
companies with annual revenues of $250 million or
more found that 65 percent of the respondents considered fraud to be a significant risk to their organizations in the next year, and more than one-third of
those identified financial reporting fraud as one of the
highest risks.
Fifty-six percent of the approximately 2100 business
professionals surveyed during a “Deloitte Forensic
Center” [4] webcast about reducing fraud risk predicted that more financial statement fraud would be
uncovered in 2010 and 2011 as compared to the previous three years. Almost half of those surveyed (46
percent) pointed to the recession as the reason for this
increase.
According to “Annual Fraud Indicator 2012” conducted by the National Fraud Authority (UK) [5],
“The scale of fraud losses in 2012, against all victims
in the UK, is in the region of £73 billion per annum. In
2006, 2010 and 2011, it was £13, £30 and £38 billions,
respectively. The 2012 estimate is significantly greater
than the previous figures because it includes new and
improved estimates in a number of areas, in particular
against the private sector. Fraud harms all areas of the
UK economy”.
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
27
Moreover, financial statement fraud was a contributing
factor to the recent financial crisis and it threatened the
efficiency, liquidity and safety of both debt and capital
markets [6]. Furthermore, it has significantly increased
uncertainty and volatility in financial markets, shaking
investor confidence worldwide. It also reduces the creditability of financial information that investors use in
investment decisions. When taking into account the loss
of investor confidence, as well as, reputational damage
and potential fines and criminal actions, it is clear why
financial misstatements should be every manager’s worst
fraud-related nightmare [7].
1.3. Who Commits Frauds?
Everyday, there are revelations of organizations behaving
in discreditable ways [8]. Generally, there are three
groups of business people who commit financial statement frauds. They range from senior management (CEO
and CFO); mid- and lower-level management and organizational criminals [9]. CEOs and CFOs commit accounting frauds to conceal true business performance, to
preserve personal status and control and to maintain personal income and wealth. Mid- and lower-level employyees falsify financial statements related to their area of
responsibility (subsidiary, division or other unit) to conceal poor performance and/or to earn performance-based
bonuses. Organizational criminals falsify financial statements to obtain loans, or to inflate a stock they plan to
sell in a “pump-and-dump” scheme. While many changes in financial audit processes have stemmed from financial fraud, or manipulations, history and related research repeatedly demonstrates that a financial audit
simply cannot be relied upon to detect fraud at any significant level.
1.4. Consequences of Fraudulent Reporting
Fraudulent financial reporting can have significant consequences for the organization and its stakeholders, as
well as for public confidence in the capital markets. Periodic high-profile cases of fraudulent financial reporting
also raise concerns about the credibility of the US financial reporting process and call into question the roles
of management, auditors, regulators, and analysts, among
others. Moreover, corporate fraud impacts organizations
in several areas: financial, operational and psychological
[10]. While the monetary loss owing to fraud is significant, the full impact of fraud on an organization can be
staggering. In fact, the losses to reputation, goodwill, and
customer relations can be devastating. When fraudulent
financial reporting occurs, serious consequences ensue.
The damage that result is also widespread, with a sometimes devastating “ripple” effect [6]. Those affected may
range from the “immediate” victims (the company’s
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M. L. BHASIN
stockholders and creditors) to the more “remote” (those
harmed when investor confidence in the stock market is
shaken). Between these two extremes, many others may
be affected: “employees” who suffer job loss or diminished pension fund value; “depositors” in financial institutions; the company’s “underwriters, auditors, attorneys,
and insurers”; and even honest “competitors” whose
reputations suffer by association.
As fraud can be perpetrated by any employee within
an organization or by those from the outside, therefore, it
is important to have an effective “fraud management”
program in place to safeguard your organization’s assets
and reputation. Thus, prevention and earlier detection of
fraudulent financial reporting must start with the entity
that prepares financial reports. Given the current state of
the economy and recent corporate scandals, fraud is still
a top concern for corporate executives. In fact, the
sweeping regulations of Sarbanes-Oxley, designed to
help prevent and detect corporate fraud, have exposed
fraudulent practices that previously may have gone undetected. Additionally, more corporate executives are
paying fines and serving prison time than ever before. No
industry is immune to fraudulent situations and the negative publicity that swirls around them. The implications
for management are clear: every organization is vulnerable to fraud, and managers must know how to detect it,
or at least, when to suspect it.
2. Review of Literature
Starting in the late 1990s, a wave of corporate frauds in
the United States occurred with Enron’s failure perhaps
being the emblematic example. Jeffords [11] examined
910 cases of frauds submitted to the “Internal Auditor”
during the nine-year period from 1981 to 1989 to assess
the specific risk factors cited in the Treadway Commission Report. He concluded that “approximately 63 percent of the 910 fraud cases are classified under the internal control risks”. In addition, Smith [12] offered a “typology” of individuals who embezzle. He indicated that
embezzlers are “opportunist’s type”, who quickly detects
the lack of weakness in internal control and seizes the
opportunity to use the deficiency to his benefit. Similarly,
Ziegenfuss [13] performed a study to determine the
amount and type of fraud occurring in “state and local”
governments. His study revealed that the most frequently
occurring types of fraud are misappropriation of assets,
theft, false representation; and false invoice.
On the other hand, Haugen and Selin [14] in their
study discussed the value of “internal” controls, which
depends largely on management’s integrity and the ready
availability of computer technology, which assisted in
the commitment of crime. Sharma and Brahma [15] emphasized on “bankers” responsibility on frauds; bank
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
frauds could crop-up in all spheres of bank’s dealing.
Major cause for perpetration of fraud is laxity in observance in laid-down system and procedures by supervising staff. Harris and William [16], however, examined
the reasons for “loan” frauds in banks and emphasized on
due diligence program. Beirstaker, Brody, Pacini [17] in
their study proposed numerous fraud protection and detection techniques. Moreover, Willison [18] examined
the causes that led to the breakdown of “Barring” Bank.
The collapse resulted due to the failures in management,
financial and operational controls of Baring Banks.
Choo and Tan [19] explained corporate fraud by relating the “fraud-triangle” to the “broken trust theory” and
to an “American Dream” theory, which originates from
the sociological literature, while Schrand and Zechman
[20] relate executive over-confidence to the commitment
of fraud. Moreover, Bhasin [21] examined the reasons
for “check” frauds, the magnitude of frauds in Indian
banks, and the manner, in which the expertise of internal
auditors can be integrated, in order to detect and prevent
frauds in banks by taking “proactive” steps to combat
frauds. Chen [22] in his study examined “unethical” leadership in the companies and compares the role of unethical leaders in a variety of scenarios. Through the use of
computer simulation models, he shows how a combination of CEO’s narcissism, financial incentive, shareholders’ expectations and subordinate silence as well as
CEO’s dishonesty can do much to explain some of the
findings highlighted in recent high-profile financial accounting scandals. According to a research study
performed by Cecchini et al. [23], the authors provided a
methodology for detecting “management” fraud using
basic financial data based on “support vector machines”.
From the above, it is evident that majority of studies
were performed in developed, Western countries. However, the manager’s behavior in fraud commitment has
been relatively unexplored so far. Accordingly, the objective of this paper is to examine managers’ unethical
behaviors in Satyam Computer Limited, which constitute
an ex-post evaluation of alleged or acknowledged fraud
case. Unfortunately, no study has been conducted to examine behavioral aspects of manager’s in the perpetuation of corporate frauds in the context of a developing
economy, like India. Hence, the present study seeks to
fill this gap and contributes to the literature.
3. Research Methodology, Objectives and
Sources of Information
Financial reporting practice can be developed by reference to a particular setting in which it is embedded.
Therefore, “qualitative” research could be seen useful to
explore and describe fraudulent financial reporting practice. Here, two issues are crucial. First, to understand why
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M. L. BHASIN
and how a “specific” company is committed to fraudulent
financial reporting practice an appropriate “interpretive”
research approach is needed. Second, case study conducted as part of this study, looked specifically at the
largest fraud case in India, involving Satyam Computer
Services (Satyam). Labelled as “India’s Enron” by the
Indian media, the Satyam accounting fraud has comprehensively exposed the failure of the regulatory oversight
mechanism in India. No doubt, to design better accounting
systems, we need to understand how accounting systems
operate in their social, political and economic contexts.
The main objectives of this study are to: 1) highlight the
Satyam Computers Limited’s accounting scandal by portraying the sequence of events, the aftermath of events, the
key parties involved, and major follow-up actions undertaken in India; and 2) what lesions can be learned from
Satyam scam?
To complement prior literature, we examined documented behaviors in cases of Satyam corporate scandal,
using the evidence taken from press articles, and also
applied a “content” analysis to them. In terms of information collection “methodology”, we searched for evidence from the press coverage contained in the “Factiva”
database. Thus, present study is primarily based on “secondary” sources of data (EBSCO host database) gathered
from the related literature published in the journals,
newspaper, books, statements, reports. However, as
stated earlier, the nature of study is “primarily qualitative, descriptive and analytical”.
4. Corporate Accounting Scandal at Satyam
Computer Services Limited: A Case
Study of India’s Enron
Ironically, Satyam means “truth” in the ancient Indian
language “Sanskrit” [24]. Satyam won the “Golden Peacock Award” for the best governed company in 2007 and
in 2009. From being India’s IT “crown jewel” and the
country’s “fourth largest” company with high-profile
customers, the outsourcing firm Satyam Computers has
become embroiled in the nation’s biggest corporate scam
in living memory [25]. Mr. Ramalinga Raju (Chairman
and Founder of Satyam; henceforth called “Raju”), who
has been arrested and has confessed to a $1.47 billion (or
Rs. 7800 crore) fraud, admitted that he had made up
profits for years. According to reports, Raju and his
brother, B. Rama Raju, who was the Managing Director,
“hid the deception from the company’s board, senior
managers, and auditors”. The case of Satyam’s accounting fraud has been dubbed as “India’s Enron”. In order to
evaluate and understand the severity of Satyam’s fraud, it
is important to understand factors that contributed to the
“unethical” decisions made by the company’s executives.
First, it is necessary to detail the rise of Satyam as a
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
29
competitor within the global IT services market-place.
Second, it is helpful to evaluate the driving-forces behind
Satyam’s decisions: Ramalinga Raju. Finally, attempt to
learn some “lessons” from Satyam fraud for the future.
4.1. Emergence of Satyam Computer Services
Limited
Satyam Computer Services Limited was a “rising-star” in
the Indian “outsourced” IT-services industry. The company was formed in 1987 in Hyderabad (India) by Mr.
Ramalinga Raju. The firm began with 20 employees and
grew rapidly as a “global” business. It offered IT and
business process outsourcing services spanning various
sectors. Satyam was as an example of “India’s growing
success”. Satyam won numerous awards for innovation,
governance, and corporate accountability. “In 2007, Ernst
& Young awarded Mr. Raju with the ‘Entrepreneur of the
Year’ award. On April 14, 2008, Satyam won awards
from MZ Consult’s for being a ‘leader in India in CG and
accountability’. In September 2008, the World Council
for Corporate Governance awarded Satyam with the
‘Global Peacock Award’ for global excellence in corporate accountability” [26]. Unfortunately, less than five
months after winning the Global Peacock Award, Satyam
became the centerpiece of a “massive” accounting fraud.
By 2003, Satyam’s IT services businesses included
13,120 technical associates servicing over 300 customers
worldwide. At that time, the world-wide IT services
market was estimated at nearly $400 billion, with an estimated annual compound growth rate of 6.4%. “The
markets major drivers at that point in time were the increased importance of IT services to businesses worldwide; the impact of the Internet on eBusiness; the emergence of a high‐quality IT services industry in India and
their methodologies; and, the growing need of IT services providers who could provide a range of services”.
To effectively compete, both against domestic and global
competitors, the company embarked on a variety of
multi‐pronged business growth strategies.
From 2003-2008, in nearly all financial metrics of interest to investors, the company grew measurably. Satyam generated USD $467 million in total sales. By
March 2008, the company had grown to USD $2.1 billion. The company demonstrated “an annual compound
growth rate of 35% over that period”. Operating profits
averaged 21%. Earnings per share similarly grew, from
$0.12 to $0.62, at a compound annual growth rate of 40%.
Over the same period (2003‐2009), the company was
trading at an average trailing EBITDA multiple of 15.36.
Finally, beginning in January 2003, at a share price of
138.08 INR, Satyam’s stock would peak at 526.25
INR—a 300% improvement in share price after nearly
five years. Satyam clearly generated significant corporate
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M. L. BHASIN
growth and shareholder value. The company was a leading star—and a recognizable name—in a global IT marketplace. The external environment in which Satyam
operated was indeed beneficial to the company’s growth.
But, the numbers did not represent the full picture. The
case of Satyam accounting fraud has been dubbed as
“India’s Enron”.
4.2. Mr. Ramalinga Raju and the Satyam Scandal
On January 7, 2009, Mr. Raju disclosed in a letter (see
Annexure) to Satyam Computers Limited Board of Directors that “he had been manipulating the company’s
accounting numbers for years”. Mr. Raju claimed that he
overstated assets on Satyam’s balance sheet by $1.47
billion. Nearly $1.04 billion in bank loans and cash that
the company claimed to own was non-existent. Satyam
also underreported liabilities on its balance sheet. Satyam
overstated income nearly every quarter over the course of
several years in order to meet analyst expectations. For
example, the results announced on October 17, 2009
overstated quarterly revenues by 75 percent and profits by
97 percent. Mr. Raju and the company’s global head of
internal audit used a number of different techniques to
perpetrate the fraud. “Using his personal computer, Mr.
Raju created numerous bank statements to advance the
fraud. Mr. Raju falsified the bank accounts to inflate the
balance sheet with balances that did not exist. He inflated
the income statement by claiming interest income from
the fake bank accounts. Mr. Raju also revealed that he
created 6000 fake salary accounts over the past few years
and appropriated the money after the company deposited
it. The company’s global head of internal audit created
fake customer identities and generated fake invoices
against their names to inflate revenue. The global head of
internal audit also forged board resolutions and illegally
obtained loans for the company” [27]. It also appeared
that the cash that the company raised through American
Depository Receipts in the United States never made it to
the balance sheets.
Greed for money, power, competition, success and
prestige compelled Mr. Raju to “ride the tiger”, which led
to violation of all duties imposed on them as fiduciaries—the duty of care, the duty of negligence, the duty of
loyalty, the duty of disclosure towards the stakeholders.
“The Satyam scandal is a classic case of negligence of
fiduciary duties, total collapse of ethical standards, and a
lack of corporate social responsibility. It is human greed
and desire that led to fraud. This type of behavior can be
traced to: greed overshadowing the responsibility to meet
fiduciary duties; fierce competition and the need to impress stakeholders especially investors, analysts, shareholders, and the stock market; low ethical and moral
standards by top management; and, greater emphasis on
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
short‐term performance” [28]. According to CBI, the Indian crime investigation agency, the fraud activity dates
back from April 1999, when the company embarked on a
road to double-digit annual growth. As of December 2008,
Satyam had a total market capitalization of $3.2 billion
dollars.
Satyam planned to acquire a 51% stake in Maytas Infrastructure Limited, a leading infrastructure development, construction and project management company,
for $300 million. Here, the Rajus’s had a 37% stake. The
total turnover was $350 million and a net profit of $20
million. Raju’s also had a 35% share in Maytas Properties, another real-estate investment firm. Satyam revenues exceeded $1 billion in 2006. In April, 2008 Satyam
became the first Indian company to publish IFRS audited
financials. On December 16, 2008, the Satyam board,
including its five independent directors had approved the
founder’s proposal to buy the stake in Maytas Infrastructure and all of Maytas Properties, which were owned by
family members of Satyam’s Chairman, Ramalinga Raju,
as fully owned subsidiary for $1.6 billion. Without
shareholder approval, the directors went ahead with the
management’s decision. The decision of acquisition was,
however, reversed twelve hours after investors sold Satyam’s stock and threatened action against the management. This was followed by the law-suits filed in the US
contesting Maytas deal. The World Bank banned Satyam
from conducting business for 8 years due to inappropriate payments to staff and inability to provide information
sought on invoices. Four independent directors quit the
Satyam board and SEBI ordered promoters to disclose
pledged shares to stock exchange.
Investment bank DSP Merrill Lynch, which was appointed by Satyam to look for a partner or buyer for the
company, ultimately blew the whistle and terminated its
engagement with the company soon after it found financial irregularities [29]. On 7 January 2009, Saytam’s
Chairman, Ramalinga Raju, resigned after notifying
board members and the Securities and Exchange Board
of India (SEBI) that Satyam’s accounts had been falsified.
Raju confessed that Satyam’s balance sheet of September
30, 2008, contained the following irregularies: “He faked
figures to the extent of Rs. 5040 crore of non-existent
cash and bank balances as against Rs. 5361 crore in the
books, accrued interest of Rs. 376 crore (non-existent),
understated liability of Rs. 1230 crore on account of
funds raised by Raju, and an overstated debtor’s position
of Rs. 490 crore. He accepted that Satyam had reported
revenue of Rs. 2700 crore and an operating margin of Rs.
649 crore, while the actual revenue was Rs. 2112 crore
and the margin was Rs. 61 crore”. In other words, Raju:
1) inflated figures for cash and bank balances of US
$1.04 billion vs. US $1.1 billion reflected in the books; 2)
an accrued interest of US $77.46 million which was nonOJAcct
M. L. BHASIN
existent; 3) an understated liability of US $253.38 million on account of funds was arranged by himself; and 4)
an overstated debtors’ position of US $100.94 million vs.
US $546.11 million in the books.
Raju claimed in the same letter that “neither he nor the
managing director had benefited financially from the
inflated revenues, and none of the board members had
any knowledge of the situation in which the company
was placed”. The fraud took place to divert company
funds into real-estate investment, keep high earnings per
share, raise executive compensation, and make huge
profits by selling stake at inflated price. The gap in the
balance sheet had arisen purely on account of inflated
profits over a period that lasted several years starting in
April 1999. “What accounted as a marginal gap between
actual operating profit and the one reflected in the books
of accounts continued to grow over the years. This gap
reached unmanageable proportions as company operations grew significantly”, Ragu explained in his letter to
the board and shareholders. He went on to explain,
“Every attempt to eliminate the gap failed, and the
aborted Maytas acquisition deal was the last attempt to
fill the fictitious assets with real ones. But the investors
thought it was a brazen attempt to siphon cash out of
Satyam, in which the Raju family held a small stake, into
firms the family held tightly”. Table 1 depicts some parts
of the Satyam’s fabricated ‘Balance Sheet and Income
Statement’ and shows the “difference” between “actual”
and “reported” finances.
Fortunately, the Satyam deal with Matyas was “salvageable”. It could have been saved only if “the deal had
been allowed to go through, as Satyam would have been
able to use Maytas’ assets to shore up its own books”.
Raju, who showed “artificial” cash on his books, had
planned to use this “non-existent” cash to acquire the two
Maytas companies. As part of their “tunneling” strategy,
the Satyam promoters had substantially reduced their
holdings in company from 25.6% in March 2001 to
8.74% in March 2008. Furthermore, as the promoters
held a very small percentage of equity (mere 2.18%) on
December 2008, as shown in Table 2, the concern was
that poor performance would result in a takeover bid,
thereby exposing the gap. It was like “riding a tiger, not
knowing how to get off without being eaten”. The
aborted Maytas acquisition deal was the final, desperate
effort to cover up the accounting fraud by bringing some
real assets into the business. When that failed, Raju confessed the fraud. Given the stake the Rajus held in Matyas, pursuing the deal would not have been terribly difficult from the perspective of the Raju family. Unlike
Enron, which sank due to agency problem, Satyam was
brought to its knee due to tunneling. The company with a
huge cash pile, with promoters still controlling it with a
small per cent of shares (less than 3%), and trying to abCopyright © 2013 SciRes.
31
Table 1. Fabricated balance sheet and income statement of
Satyam: as of September 30, 2008.
Items Rs. in crore
Actual
Reported
Difference
Cash and Bank
Balances
321
5361
5040
Accrued Interest on
Bank Fixed Deposits
Nil
376.5
376
Understated Liability
1230
None
1230
Overstated Debtors
2161
2651
490
Total
Nil
Nil
7136
Revenues (Q2 FY 2009)
2112
2700
588
Operating Profits
61
649
588
Table 2. Promoter’s shareholding pattern in Satyam from
2001 to 2008.
As on
Promoter’s holding in %
March 2001
25.6
2002
22.26
2003
20.74
2004
17.35
2005
15.67
2006
14.02
2007
8.79
2008
8.74
Dec. 2008
2.18
sorb a real-estate company in which they have a majority
stake is a deadly combination pointing prima facie to
tunneling [30]. The reason why Ramalinga Raju claims
that he did it was because every year he was fudging
revenue figures and since expenditure figures could not
be fudged so easily, the gap between “actual” profit and
“book” profit got widened every year. In order to close
this gap, he had to buy Maytas Infrastructure and Maytas
Properties. In this way, “fictitious” profits could be absorbed through a “self-dealing” process. The auditors,
bankers, and SEBI, the market watchdog, were all
blamed for their role in the accounting fraud.
4.3. The Auditors Role and Factors Contributing
to Fraud
Global auditing firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC),
audited Satyam’s books from June 2000 until the discovery of the fraud in 2009. Several commentators criticized
PwC harshly for failing to detect the fraud. Indeed, PwC
signed Satyam’s financial statements and was responsible
for the numbers under the Indian law. One particularly
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32
troubling item concerned the $1.04 billion that Satyam
claimed to have on its balance sheet in “non-interestbearing” deposits. According to accounting professionals,
“any reasonable company would have either invested the
money into an interest-bearing account, or returned the
excess cash to the shareholders. The large amount of cash
thus should have been a ‘red-flag’ for the auditors that
further verification and testing was necessary. Furthermore, it appears that the auditors did not independently
verify with the banks in which Satyam claimed to have
deposits”.
Additionally, the Satyam fraud went on for a number of
years and involved both the manipulation of balance
sheets and income statements. Whenever Satyam needed
more income to meet analyst estimates, it simply created
“fictitious” sources and it did so numerous times, without
the auditors ever discovering the fraud. Suspiciously,
Satyam also paid PwC twice what other firms would
charge for the audit, which raises questions about whether
PwC was complicit in the fraud. Furthermore, PwC audited the company for nearly 9 years and did not uncover
the fraud, whereas Merrill Lynch discovered the fraud as
part of its due diligence in merely 10 days. Missing these
“red-flags” implied either that the auditors were grossly
inept or in collusion with the company in committing the
fraud. PWC initially asserted that it performed all of the
company’s audits in accordance with applicable auditing
standards.
Numerous factored contributed to the Satyam fraud.
The independent board members of Satyam, the institutional investor community, the SEBI, retail investors, and
the external auditor—none of them, including professional investors with detailed information and models
available to them, detected the malfeasance. The following is a list of factors that contributed to the fraud: greed,
ambitious corporate growth, deceptive reporting practices—lack of transparency, excessive interest in maintaining stock prices, executive incentives, stock market
expectations, nature of accounting rules, ESOPs issued to
those who prepared fake bills, high risk deals that went
sour, audit failures (internal and external), aggressiveness
of investment and commercial banks, rating agencies and
investors, weak independent directors and audit committee, and whistle-blower policy not being effective.
4.4. Aftermath of Satyam Scandal
Immediately following the news of the fraud, Merrill
Lynch terminated its engagement with Satyam, Credit
Suisse suspended its coverage of Satyam, and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) came under intense scrutiny and
its license to operate was revoked. Coveted awards won
by Satyam and its executive management were stripped
from the company. Satyam’s shares fell to 11.50 rupees
on January 10, 2009, their lowest level since March 1998,
compared to a high of 544 rupees in 2008. In the New
York Stock Exchange, Satyam shares peaked in 2008 at
US $ 29.10; by March 2009 they were trading around US
$1.80. Thus, investors lost $2.82 billion in Satyam. Unfortunately, Satyam significantly inflated its earnings and
assets for years and rolling down Indian stock markets
and throwing the industry into turmoil [31]. Criminal
charges were brought against Mr. Raju, including:
criminal conspiracy, breach of trust, and forgery. After
the Satyam fiasco and the role played by PwC, investors
became wary of those companies who are clients of PwC,
which resulted in fall in share prices of around 100 companies varying between 5% – 15%. The news of the
scandal (quickly compared with the collapse of Enron)
sent jitters through the Indian stock market, and the
benchmark Sensex index fell more than 5%. Shares in
Satyam fell more than 70%. The chart titled as “Fall from
grace”, shown in Exhibit 1 depicts the Satyam’s stock
decline between December 2008 and January 2009.
Immediately after Raju’s revelation about the accounting fraud, “new” board members were appointed
and they started working towards a solution that would
prevent the total collapse of the firm. Indian officials
acted quickly to try to save Satyam from the same fate
that met Enron and WorldCom, when they experienced
large accounting scandals. The Indian government “immediately started an investigation, while at the same time
limiting its direct participation, with Satyam because it
did not want to appear like it was responsible for the
Exhibit 1. Stock Charting of Satyam from December 2008 to January 2009.
Copyright © 2013 SciRes.
OJAcct
M. L. BHASIN
fraud, or attempting to cover up the fraud”. The government appointed a “new” board of directors for Satyam to
try to save the company. The Board’s goal was “to sell the
company within 100 days”. To devise a plan of sale, the
board met with bankers, accountants, lawyers, and government officials immediately. It worked diligently to
bring stability and confidence back to the company to
ensure the sale of the company within the 100-day time
frame. To accomplish the sale, the board hired Goldman
Sachs and Avendus Capital and charged them with selling
the company in the shortest time possible.
By mid-March, several major players in the IT field had
gained enough confidence in Satyam’s operations to participate in an auction process for Satyam. The Securities
and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) appointed a retired
Supreme Court Justice, Justice Bharucha, to oversee the
process and instill confidence in the transaction. Several
companies bid on Satyam on April 13, 2009. The winning
bidder, Tech Mahindra, bought Satyam for $1.13 per
share—less than a third of its stock market value before
Mr. Raju revealed the fraud—and salvaged its operations
[32]. Both Tech Mahindra and the SEBI are now fully
aware of the full extent of the fraud and India will not
pursue further investigations. The stock has again stabilized from its fall on November 26, 2009 and, as part of
Tech Mahindra, Saytam is once again on its way toward a
bright future.
4.5. Investigation: Criminal and Civil Charges
The investigation that followed the revelation of the fraud
has led to charges against several different groups of
people involved with Satyam. Indian authorities arrested
Mr. Raju, Mr. Raju’s brother, B. Ramu Raju, its former
managing director, Srinivas Vdlamani, the company’s
head of internal audit, and its CFO on criminal charges of
fraud. Indian authorities also arrested and charged several
of the company’s auditors (PwC) with fraud. The Institute
of Chartered Accountants of India [33] ruled that “the
CFO and the auditor were guilty of professional misconduct”. The CBI is also in the course of investigating the
CEO’s overseas assets. There were also several civil
charges filed in the US against Satyam by the holders of
its ADRs. The investigation also implicated several Indian
politicians. Both civil and criminal litigation cases continue in India …
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