&w=3840&q=100)
Sebi bans Wadhawan brothers for five years in DHFL fund diversion case
The former promoters have also been prohibited from holding any key position in a listed company.
The ban on Rakesh Wadhawan and Sarang Wadhawan is for four years each, while former Chief Executive Officer and Joint Managing Director Harshil Mehta and former Chief Financial Officer Santosh Sharma have been debarred for three years each.
Sebi has imposed a total penalty of Rs 120 crore on all of them, with Kapil and Dheeraj each fined Rs 27 crore—the highest among the penalties.
The regulator alleged their involvement in a fraudulent scheme under which loans were disbursed to 87 'Bandra Book Entities' (BBEs) connected to each other and to the DHFL promoter group.
Sebi noted that 39 BBEs, which received Rs 5,662.44 crore from DHFL, transferred 40 per cent of this amount into 48 companies linked to the DHFL promoters. As of March 2019, the net outstanding loans to BBEs totalled Rs 14,040 crore.
The regulator said these large unsecured loans to related parties with extremely weak financials were 'blatantly mischaracterised' as retail housing loans.
'The disguised nature of the BBE loans also delayed regulatory intervention and eventually threatened market stability,' said Sebi Whole-Time Member Ananth Narayan.
Sebi will determine the quantum of illegal gains or benefits from the scheme and may take further action.
It added that, had DHFL presented accurate financial statements and excluded 'fictitious' interest income from loans to BBEs, the company would have reported losses every year between FY2007–08 and FY2015–16. Instead, it continued to post profits.
'To effect this elaborate deception, a fake virtual branch ('Bandra branch') and previously closed retail loan accounts were employed alongside three different accounting software systems, camouflaging the BBE loans as retail housing loans. In the initial years, well over 30 per cent of all loans of DHFL were to these BBEs,' the order said.
Sebi noted that the publication of false financials misled stakeholders and compromised the integrity of share price discovery, inducing investors to remain invested under the belief that 'all was well' at DHFL.
An interim order in the matter had been passed by Sebi in September 2020, imposing initial restraints.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
28 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Tata Motors' balance sheet strength to offset demerger, acquisition risks: S&P Global Ratings
Tata Motors' balance sheet strength will offset the impact of the demerger of its commercial vehicle business and risks associated with the proposed acquisition of Italian firm Iveco, S&P Global Ratings said on Thursday. The company's credit profile is evolving amid the proposed acquisition of Iveco Group, the upcoming demerger of the commercial vehicle business, slowing demand, and tariff uncertainties, S&P Global Ratings said in a statement. Its balance sheet strength remains intact despite a slew of recent developments, it added. "The Iveco acquisition will not affect our rating on Tata Motors (BBB/Stable/--). This is because the rated entity will only house the passenger vehicles business after the demerger, which will likely conclude shortly," the ratings agency said. A new entity will hold the commercial vehicle business, and Iveco will fall under this entity once the acquisition is complete, possibly by April 2026. Last month, Tata Motors announced that it would acquire Italian commercial vehicle maker Iveco Group, excluding its defence business, for euro 3.8 billion (nearly Rs 38,240 crore) in a deal which is set to be the Indian automaker's biggest buyout. S&P Global Ratings further said Tata Motors' passenger vehicle business will be under Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles Ltd. The company will include TML Holdings Pte. Ltd. (BBB/Stable/--), the holding company for the group's international operations and issuer of the rated senior unsecured notes. "We view Tata Motors' proposed acquisition of Iveco as strategic. It will expand the group's scale and geographic diversity. We estimate the acquisition will increase Tata Motors' commercial vehicles revenue and EBITDA by about 2x from fiscal 2026 (year ending March 31) levels," it noted. The combined business's revenue of about USD 25 billion will position it closer to rated peers, such as PACCAR Inc. (USD32 billion) and Traton SE (USD43 billion). Iveco's presence in Europe and Latin America will also reduce the geographic concentration of Tata Motors' commercial vehicles manufacturing. However, Iveco is not a market leader in its key markets. It also has limited direct synergies with Tata Motors' commercial vehicles portfolio, given their different pricing range, S&P Global Ratings said. Stating that Iveco's acquisition will increase debt at Tata Motors' commercial vehicle business, the ratings agency said, "The treatment of Iveco's asset-backed securitisation of receivables as debt will be a key consideration while assessing the commercial vehicles business' financial position." It further noted that the performance of the passenger vehicles business, including its subsidiary, Jaguar Land Rover Automotive PLC (JLR), is likely to remain weak through fiscal 2026. "Geopolitical uncertainties pose significant downside risks. Commercial vehicle sales volumes are also likely to remain under pressure, but higher realisations could temper the impact on revenues," it said. Still, S&P Global Ratings said, "Tata Motors' efforts to pay down debt over the past two years will allow it to navigate the tough operating conditions. For now, we estimate the company's ratio of funds from operations to debt will stay above 100 per cent over the next 12-24 months, maintaining sufficient headroom versus the downside trigger of 40 per cent." On its stable rating outlook on Tata Motors, the ratings agency said it "reflects our expectation that the company will maintain a strong balance sheet, with a sound operational performance." The outlook also reflects JLR's continued progress in its transition to production of electric vehicles, including the launch of an electric Range Rover model by the end of the year, it said.


Economic Times
28 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Shocking CCTV video shows thief with rod during four-minute robbery in Indore — complete timeline inside
Synopsis In a brazen early morning heist, thieves targeted the Indore residence of retired Justice Ramesh Garg, making off with over Rs 5 lakh in cash and jewelry in just over four minutes. The criminals bypassed the alarm system, unnoticed by the sleeping family and security guard. Police are investigating the meticulously planned robbery, complicated by the thieves leaving no fingerprints. Screenshot from the viral video. A shocking and audacious theft unfolded early Sunday morning at the residence of retired Justice Ramesh Garg in Pragati Park Colony, Indore, where three criminals brazenly stole over Rs 5 lakh in cash and valuable gold and silver jewellery — all within a mere 4 minutes and 10 seconds. Despite the home's alarm system sounding, the family remained unaware as the thieves moved swiftly and silently through the house, reported by Deccan Chronicle. Based on the CCTV footage analyzed by police: 4:35 AM – The burglars forced entry by cutting through an iron window grill and immediately made their way to Justice Garg's son Ritvik's room. 4:36 AM – While one criminal stood guard, the other two began breaking open a cupboard lock. 4:37 AM – The lock broke, triggering the alarm; yet, Ritvik remained asleep, completely oblivious to the break-in. 4:38 AM – The burglars calmly removed cash and jewellery from the cupboard. 4:39 AM – The suspects left the room and exited the house, completing the entire robbery in shockingly little time. — Incognito_qfs (@Incognito_qfs) Adding to the audacity, Ritvik's wife and children were asleep in an adjacent room, and a security guard was present but did not detect or stop the thieves. Senior police officials, including Additional SP Rural Rupesh Dwivedi and DSP Headquarters Umakant Chaudhary, arrived at the scene with forensic teams and sniffer dogs to investigate the meticulously planned crime. The burglars had worn gloves, leaving no fingerprints or physical evidence, complicating the probe. To protect the family's privacy, police have withheld the CCTV footage, but the investigation to identify and arrest the suspects continues.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
28 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Indian ARCs acquire stressed loans worth ₹16,876 crore in Q1 FY26
Asset reconstruction companies (ARCs) in India acquired stressed loans worth Rs 16,876 crore in the first quarter ended June 2025 (Q1FY26), marking a 22 per cent year-on-year (Y-o-Y) growth. They had acquired stressed loans — non-performing assets (NPAs) plus loans with dues of up to 90 days — worth Rs 13,852 crore in April–June 2024 (Q1FY25), according to data from the Association of ARCs in India. The association flagged the risk of rising stress in the system due to the adverse fallout of high tariffs on Indian exports. Security receipts (SRs) issued in Q1FY26 stood at Rs 4,388 crore, up 19.3 per cent Y-o-Y from Rs 3,678 crore in Q1FY25. The pace of SR redemption in Q1 was higher at 22 per cent Y-o-Y, with absolute redemptions amounting to Rs 7,725 crore, up from Rs 6,310 crore a year ago. This led to a contraction in outstanding SRs — considered assets under management (AUM) — to Rs 1.30 trillion at end-June 2025 from Rs 1.36 trillion a year earlier. Hari Hara Mishra, Chief Executive Officer, ARC Association, said: 'Overall Q1 performance this year was slightly better than Q1 of last year (Q1FY25). However, negative AUM continues. Things are likely to change, as pockets of stress are getting broad-based. Global uncertainty and rising insolvency in major economies indicate stress is building up, and its contagion effect on domestic firms cannot be ruled out.' 'NPAs are cyclical and do not have a linear end. Going forward, book building at ARCs is likely to grow,' Mishra added. Corporate SR issuance in Q1FY26 stood at Rs 2,675 crore, down from Rs 3,182 crore a year ago. However, retail acquisitions surged, with SR issuance at Rs 1,713 crore in Q1 compared to just Rs 496 crore a year earlier — a threefold jump that provides a glimmer of hope against the decline in corporate SRs. Recovery remained robust at Rs 14,046 crore in Q1FY26, against Rs 46,621 crore for the whole of FY25. Restructuring continued to be the dominant resolution strategy, accounting for 40 per cent Y-o-Y in recovery in Q1, followed by settlement at 26 per cent and asset sales at 34 per cent, the association added.