Satyam Board To Meet Again This Saturday
With a high profile board at the helm of Satyam, the stakeholders in Satyaam are seeing some ray of hope that all is not lost as yet.
The new board of fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services will meet again on Saturday to look for ways to raise new funds after both the government and the company rejected talk of a state rescue bid.
Media speculation of government aid has mounted as analysts questioned whether India’s biggest corporate fraud had left the outsourcing firm with enough money to pay its 50,000 staff.
But Economic Affairs Secretary Ashok Chawla told reporters on Thursday that the government was not looking at any direct support for the company or bailout “at this stage.”
Deepak Parekh, a senior banker and Satyam board member, said it had 17 billion rupees ($348 million) in receivables and may not need new funding if the money came in on time. But Parekh added the board would consider bank loans if necessary.
The government, which dissolved Satyam’s previous board last week, appointed three new directors on Sunday and another three late on Thursday to help steer the company out of crisis.
Company Affairs Minister Prem Chand Gupta said the first impression from the new directors about the company is that its operations are sound and that “by and large” major customers were willing to remain with the firm.
“All these are steps in the right direction but they need to get a CEO and CFO in place first to run the company’s daily operations. That should be a priority,” said Gajendra Nagpal, chief executive of Unicon Financial.
Satyam’s shares jumped as much as 40 per cent on Friday to 28.40 rupees after the government doubled the size of the board, but the stock has still lost over 80 percent of its value since the massive fraud was revealed.
Many questions about the accounting scandal remain to be answered: how large is it, who benefited, and how did the perpetrators manage to conceal it for so long?
Even if Satyam escapes a near-term cash crunch, it faces a long road to recovery. The new board will have to keep clients from defecting to Satyam’s rivals, fend off a growing number of lawsuits over the scandal and try to rebuild investor trust.
Lazard Asset Management said in a notice to the stock exchange on Friday it had sold all of its 5.3 percent holding in Satyam through open market transactions on Thursday. Satyam’s clients include corporate giants such as Nestle and General Electric.
Satyam’s founder Raju, his brother who was the managing director of the company and the former chief financial officer have been charged and are being held in a jail.
Raju’s lawyer Bharat Kumar said his bail application would be heard by a court on Friday.
Related News on Satyam Scam:
- Government Dissolves Satyam Board, 10th January Meeting Cancelled - In a strong and quick step, the government on Friday...
- New Satyam Board All Set To Meet Within 24 Hours - Things are moving at a fast pace with the Government...
- New Satyam Board To Meet On Monday In Hyderabad - The newly appointed board by the Government after dissolving of...
- Government Dissolves Satyam’s Board - The Indian ministry has taken swift action and has received...
- Indian Firms Reviewing Fraud Control Mechanism - In the face of the Satyam scam and its deadly...
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(1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)
Raju has admitted that around 6,000 fake salary accounts have been created and the funds have been transfered through these accounts.
How is the new management ensuring that the January salaries, which are paid / to be paid are not paid into these accounts. If salary has already been creaidted to these accounts, there should be a governing process to recover the amount paid.