Why did B. Ramalinga Raju do it? No, we are not talking about why and how he
fooled all of us for seven years by presenting blatantly false financials of
his company, Satyam Computer Services. We are more concerned about the
timing of his sensational confession. What really makes a fraudster listen
to his conscience? Or did he do it under duress because of pressure from his
family members, friends and professional colleagues? Did he just wake up on
7 January and decide that he wanted to become the honest gentleman that he
was way back in the 1980s? Or is there a more sinister reason to explain the
revelations?

There are several conspiracy theories to explain the origins of the letter
that Raju wrote to the Satyam board, admitting his guilt. But we will try
and separate the grain from the chaff. He did it for the 'larger good' of
everyone he knew, including himself. In retrospect, it may turn out to be a
master stroke. Thanks to his 7 January letter, Raju has possibly saved
Satyam, the group firms managed by his sons, friends and colleagues, and the
politicians who helped him in the past. In an ironical twist to the tale, he
may have saved himself from a long term behind the bars.

The fact is that Satyam as a company was about to collapse under its own
financial weight. With a 3% margin, as Raju claimed, almost non-existent
cash balances, with no hope of a new pipeline after Raju had pledged most of
his personal shares with institutions, which sold them off, huge liabilities
and receivables, and highly inflated revenues and profits, the company
didn't have the money even to pay salaries in January 2009. Kiran Karnik,
one of the six government-appointed directors on Satyam's board, has
publicly said that the company needs nearly Rs 2,000 crore cash over the
next three months.

In fact, this is the reason why the failed merger with group firms,
MaytasInfrastructure and
Maytas Properties, for Rs 8,000 crore was critical for Raju's survival. In
one stroke, it would have cleaned up Satyam's balance sheet. The deal, which
was opposed by institutional shareholders as the two Maytas firms were
controlled by Raju's sons and, therefore, smacked of conflict of interest,
would have infused new assets and also ensured new revenue and profit
streams. For example, Maytas Properties possesses a land bank of 6,800
acres, with the ability to construct 245 million sq ft of built-up space.

*The Satyam Saga*

*1987*

Company established

*1991*

IPO over-subscribed by 17 times; company gets its first Fortune 500 customer
in John Deere & amp; Co.

*1993*

Awarded ISO 9001 certification. Signs joint venture with GE, another Fortune
500 company.

*1999*

Satyam Infoway (Sify) becomes the first Indian Internet firm listed on the
Nasdaq. (Six years later the company sold its entire stake in Sify to a
strategic investor. )

*2000*

Company merged with Satyam Enterprise Solutions (SES) in a way that benefits
Srini Raju of SES.

*2001*

Satyam Computer Services listed on the NYSE (SAY).

*1999-2001*

Its stock was one of the 10 that Ketan Parekh was rigging.

*2002*

The Dept of Co Affairs seeks clarification on alleged violation of the
Companies Act.

*2004*

Acquires Citisoft and Knowledge Dynamics. Features in the Forbes Top Asian
Companies.

*2005*

UK-based IT firm Upaid files case against Satyam for alleged fraud and
forgery.

*2006*

Company says 'Revenue exceeds US$1 b'. Gets award from Institute of Internal
Auditors, US.

*2008*

Announces acquisition of Maytas Prop and Maytas Infra. Deal shelved after
outcry.

*2009*

Raju confesses to Rs 7,000-crore fraud; arrested. Satyam board
reconstituted.

At the Satyam's board meeting on 16 December 2008 to discuss the merger, Ram
Mynampati, a former director, disclosed that there was little future in
infotech as accelerated growth was difficult in the current scenario, prices
and margins were under pressure, and there was discomfort about
anti-outsourcing voices emanating from the US, especially from the new
President Barack Obama. Therefore, entry in construction and infrastructure
seemed like an ideal de-risking strategy. If things had gone according to
plan, Raju could have easily jumped off the Satyam tiger without being
'eaten up'.

When this strategy didn't work, Raju had no option. The only way to save
Satyam was to come out in the open, confess to his crimes and hope that the
government would act swiftly to save the future of Satyam's 53,000 employees
as well as restrict the possible negative impact on the Indian IT story.
This is exactly what happened. The future of Satyam, its employees and
Indian IT seem much safer today. When we spoke to a few employees, they
sounded a bit reticent, but confident. All of them said they were
�optimistic that things would be back to normal soon�.

Raju's sons were obviously angry. The father had practically destroyed their
future. By not being able to go through with the merger, he had made sure
that the Satyam scandal would become public knowledge. It could force
several state governments, including that of Andhra Pradesh, to cancel the
high-profile infrastructure contracts bagged by Maytas Infrastructure and
Maytas Properties. At present, the two entities are working on projects
worth Rs 30,000 crore, including the prestigious Hyderabad metro rail.
Satyam's truth had the potential to severely tarnish the sons' image. And it
did. However, the sons' anger could have weighed heavily on a desperate Raju,
forcing him to reveal everything.

*How Raju did it*

The Rs 7,000-crore Satyam scam was the outcome of a series of accounting
misdemeanours by B. Ramalinga Raju and his accomplices. Here's how he
doctored Satyam's books and hoodwinked investors for seven years:

*Inflated Profits:* Over the last several years. For September quarter,
revenues and operating margin overstated at Rs 2,700 cr and Rs 649 cr (24%
of revenue) against actual of Rs 2,112 cr and Rs 61 cr (3% of revenue).

*Overstated Cash & amp; Bank Balances:* Of Satyam's reported cash and bank
balances of Rs 5,361 cr on 30 Sept 2008, Rs 5,040 cr was non-existent. Even
accrued interest of Rs 376 cr shown in books was non-existent.

*Hid Liabilities:* Debt on account of funds arranged by Raju by pledging
shares was understated by Rs 1,230 cr. This was one of the triggers for
Raju's confession after lenders sold these shares on margin triggers.

*Inflated Receivables:* Debtors' position was overstated by Rs 490 cr.
Together, with this overstated debtors' position and understated
liabilities, a staggering hole of Rs 7,136 cr arose in the balance sheet.

There's another angle to the family drama. Maybe there was a feeling that if
Raju went down taking all the blame, there wouldn't be too much of an impact
on the sons' businesses. It is probable that the nonexistent cash balances
that Raju is talking about were monies that were siphoned out of Satyam to
finance his sons' projects. It is possible that a part of the cash balances
has gone into the personal accounts of family members. Or it could have been
partially used to bribe officials in lieu of government projects awarded to
the Maytas companies.

Now, consider what was going on in the minds of Raju's close colleagues
before the founder's letter. They were scared. If Satyam went down, so would
they. For no one would believe that Raju carried out this fraud for so long
without the senior managers being aware of it. In return for their undying
loyalty, they demanded Raju's head. He had to tell the truth and take the
blame himself. This too seems to be panning out the right way as until now
only the former CFO, Srinivas Vadlamani, has been arrested by government
sleuths, who seem more worried about finding the extent of the damage.

As Raju got sucked into a financial tornado that he had created in the first
place, he had to take care of the politicians, who had helped him throughout
his entrepreneurial career. Yet again, it seemed like a perfect solution for
Raju to confess after wiping out the tell-tale marks that could have pointed
at a nexus between Satyam and the state's political leaders.

As of now, the media is speculating that former Andhra Pradesh chief
minister N. Chandrababu Naidu of the Telugu Desam Party helped Raju wriggle
out of income-tax cases earlier this decade. It is also being rumoured that
the current Chief Minister, Y.S.R. Reddy of the Congress, helped Raju's sons
bag the prestigious infrastructure projects in the state. Interestingly,
both Reddy and Naidu are accusing each other of helping the Raju family.

*Red Flags That Were Ignored*

There were enough indications that something was wrong at Satyam, but nobody
noticed these till it was too late.

*Mismatch in balance sheet entries:* Starting 2002-3, the company's reported
cash and bank balance, including term deposits, continued to swell without
matching the growth in cash flow. In fact, Satyam's free cash flow continued
to wobble and was negative in two years.

*Auditor fees shoots up:* Auditor fees increased three times in the past
couple of years though other IT companies continued to pay the same amount.

*Non-payment of advance tax:* Satyam did not pay advance tax in 2008-9.
Payment of advance tax is an indicator of profitability and non-payment
could imply that trouble has been brewing for some time.

*Vanishing brass:* In August 2008, many top officials left the company. This
should have been a reason for further investigation.

*Not using cash to acquire:* It was puzzling that the company was proposing
to invest $1.6 billion in real estate at a time when HCL was trying to
expand its presence in the SAP market, essentially Satyam's turf.

*Cash idling in current account:* In Oct 2008, analyst Kawaljeet Saluja of
Kotak Securities almost blew the lid off the scam when he questioned the
rationale for keeping $550 million idle in a current account.

More political skeletons are likely to tumble out of Raju's cupboards, but
they are likely to be mere limbs because the crucial evidence may have been
carefully hidden, or simply made to vanish. Just like the thousands of
crores of rupees in Satyam's bank accounts over the past seven years.

That leaves us with Raju. He had to chalk out his own survival too. After
such a massive scam, possibly the biggest in the history of corporate India,
he could languish in jail for the rest of his life. However, by admitting to
cooking up the accounts, he may successfully divert attention from a far
more serious crime siphoning off money from a public company. Some lawyers
feel that his confession may get him some form of immunity. And he may be
let off with minor penalties. Section 24(B) of the Sebi Act states that if a
person has made �full and true disclosure of the alleged violation�, he
can be granted immunity from prosecution for some of the offences.

We hope this doesn't happen in this case. Raju's conviction has to act as a
deterrent to other optimistic and over-confident owners, who may think that
they too can get away with such frauds. Or else, India Inc. will witness the
birth of more Rajus who, as detailed out in a recent study by Wharton
School, would believe that their firms were experiencing �only a bad
quarter or patch of bad luck� and that it was �in the interest of
everyone involved... to cover up the problem�. But when things don't
improve, the promoter is forced to continue his �fraudulent behaviour and
he has to do more� in the subsequent quarters. Therefore, it is imperative
for the government to financially reboot India Inc.


B.Karthick
Research Analyst.
www.kences1training.blogspot.com

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