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Nine years after sending the first notice to Price Waterhouse for anomalies in auditing the books of scam-hit erstwhile Satyam Computers System, the market regulator SEBI on Wednesday barred its network entities from issuing audit certificates to any listed company in India for two years. It also ordered disgorgement of over Rs 13 crore wrongful gains from the audit major and its two erstwhile partners who worked on the IT major’s accounts.
In a 108-page order posted on its website, the markets regulator imposed a two-year ban on “entities or firms practicing as chartered accountants in India under the brand and banner of Price Waterhouse from directly or indirectly issuing any certificate of audit of listed companies, compliance of obligations of listed companies and intermediaries registered with SEBI.”
The order will not impact audit assignments relating to the financial year 2017-18 undertaken by the firms forming part of the PW network, SEBI clarified.
We are disappointed with the findings of the SEBI investigations and the adjudication order, Price Waterhouse said, in an emailed response.
The order comes after several rounds of litigation before the Securities Appellate Tribunal, Bombay High Court and the Supreme Court.
The action stems from India’s biggest accounting fraud at Satyam after its founder Ramalinga Raju admitted to cooking up books in 2009. The Securities and Exchange Board of India had sent a notice to Price Waterhouse pointing out that it had accepted Satyam’s monthly bank statements as final even though they didn’t match with the company’s daily bank statements.
SEBI had also found Price Waterhouse non-compliant with the auditing standards prescribed by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. S Gopalakrishnan and Srinivas Talluri had certified Satyam’s audit reports during that period.
It later contested the notice before the Securities Appellate Tribunal, saying the auditor was not given access to the entire material collected during the investigation and had been denied the right to cross-examine persons whose statements SEBI had relied upon.
The appellate tribunal held that SEBI had violated principles of natural justice and directed the market regulator to allow Price Waterhouse to cross-examine several individuals, including Raju.
SEBI challenged the order before the Supreme Court, which rejected its plea in January last year and directed the market regulator to give Price Waterhouse access to investigation material.
(This article was originally published on BloombergQuint)
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