Source: Edelweiss AMC
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India’s tycoon Singh brothers took at least Rs 5 billion ($78 million) out of the publicly-traded hospital company they control without board approval about a year ago, people with knowledge of the matter said.
The funds were reported on the balance sheet of Fortis Healthcare Ltd as cash and cash equivalents, but the money was routed and placed under the control of the Singhs at the time, according to the people. Fortis’s auditor, Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP, refused to sign off on the company’s second-quarter results until the funds were accounted for or returned, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private.
It wasn’t immediately clear what the Singhs may have used the funds for. Fortis founders Malvinder Singh and his brother, Shivinder, have been working to pay back the money so the company can release its results, the people said.
A spokesman for Fortis said the company loaned Rs 4.73 billion to “certain corporate bodies in normal course of treasury operations” as of July 2017, and in the third quarter of the current financial year those companies subsequently became part of the Singhs’ corporate group.
The loans have since been recognised as related party transactions and repayment has commenced, the spokesman said in an emailed statement.
Some stuff I am reading today morning:
Why the stock markets are in turmoil (CNBC)
Everything is a Sell in China (Bloomberg)
For Millenial Investors, a harsh lesson in market gyrations (NYTimes)
How Bank of Baroda’s mistakes dragged it into S.Africa’s political crisis (HT)
Singh brothers resign from Fortis Board (FE)
Stock Talk: PI Industries (MC)
Allahabad Bank share sale: Staff allege coercion (Mint)
S Naren: Invest in large caps and debt funds (BS)
Three Cheers for SEBI (MF Critic)
This Kolkata guy has cracked the multi-bagger code (ET)
Galaxy Surfactants got listed today and is trading around Rs.1,600 levels.
Around 23 years back, the Company made an appeal to investors to invest in their company as can be seen from the letter below:
Since then, the company has given bonuses and dividends taking the effective cost price of the shares to negative.
This is a great example of how a honest, hardworking and efficient management can create wealth for its shareholders.