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SEBI Bars Securekloud, Its Directors From Securities Markets For Up To 3 Years; Slaps Rs 10-Crore Fine

SEBI slapped a fine of Rs 3 crore each on STL and Venkatachari, and Rs 2 crore each on Ramani and Jayaraman

SEBI slapped a fine of Rs 3 crore each on STL and Venkatachari
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The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has barred Securekloud Technologies Ltd (STL) and its three directors from the securities markets for a period ranging from one to three years and imposed total penalties of Rs 10 crore on them for allegedly misrepresenting financials of the company.
     
The SEBI order has also prohibited three company directors—Suresh Venkatachari, RS Ramani and Gurumurthi Jayaraman—from being associated as a director or key managerial personnel in a listed company or an intermediary from six months up to one year.
     
SEBI slapped a fine of Rs 3 crore each on STL and Venkatachari, and Rs 2 crore each on Ramani and Jayaraman, according to the order. 
     
They have been directed to pay the penalty within 45 days, SEBI said in its final order passed on Friday.
     
Pursuant to receipt of several complaints alleging financial misreporting/irregularities by promoters and management of STL and the forensic audit report by Deloitte, which brought out various irregularities indicating that suspected offences including fraud have been committed in the company, received by the regulator in December 2019.
    
Thereafter, SEBI initiated an investigation in the affairs of the company for the period covering financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21.
     
The focus of the said investigation was broadly to investigate into the manner of alleged misstatement in the books of accounts of the company.
     
In its probe, Sebi found that there was misrepresentation of financial statements of STL, the consolidated revenue of the firm rose manifold within short span of time i.e from Rs 271.93 Crore in FY 2015-16 to Rs 850.39 crore in FY 2018-19.
     
Also, once the STL stopped booking fictitious revenue (from 2019-20 onwards), its revenue decreased to Rs 386.43 crore during FY 2019-20.
     
Further, the company also inflated its balance sheet size by capitalizing fictitious expenditure towards development of software, resulting in its balance sheet size increasing from Rs 44.76 crore as on March 31, 2013 to Rs 997.99 crore as on March 31, 2019.
     
After impairment and other write offs, balance sheet size of the Company reduced from Rs 997.99 crore to Rs 242.82 crore  in single financial year, Rs 755.17 crore was wiped off from balance sheet of the company, as per the order.
     
With respect to misrepresentation, the investors were influenced by such manipulated financial statements and purchased the company’s shares, which created a misleading appearance with respect to share price of the company, thereby resulting in the manipulation of the share price of STL.
     
"I note that Venakatachari being MD & CEO of STL published the manipulated financial statements of the company and the same to induce the investors to invest in the shares of the firm by siphoning of Rs 3.83 crore from the company and making personal gains by off-loading shares of the company when the price of the shares of STL was high," SEBI's Whole-Time Member Ananta Barua said.
     
Accordingly, SEBI directed STL to undertake the measures to bring back or recover Rs 3.83 crore from Venkatachari within a period of one year.
     
In addition, the regulator also observed that Ramani and Jayaraman being CFO and Chairman of audit committee have been found complicit in misrepresentation in books of accounts of STL by recognising fictitious revenue and expenses by the firm, thereby violating disclosure lapses.
     
Also, Ramani has sold/transferred substantial quantities of shares when the scrip was trading at very high prices and made huge personal gains at the cost of unsuspecting investors who appear to have been lured into purchasing the company's shares by publication of manipulated financial statements showing inflated revenue and profitability.
     
"It found that STL did not disclose the information regarding initiation of forensic audit by Sebi and incorporation of STL's foreign subsidiaries, to the stock exchanges thus, keeping the investors in dark about their wrong doings," the order said. 
 

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