Satyam pulls out of Oz university development project

Melbourne, Sep 11 (ANI): Mahindra Satyam has pulled out of a 75 million dollars software development project at Deakin University that was set to create 2000 jobs in Geelong, Victoria.

The company’s president of corporate affairs, Sujit Baksi, informed the state government of its intention in a letter to IT minister John Lenders.

According to the Geelong Advertiser, Baksi wrote: “The need to concentrate on an extensive internal restructuring program of our business precludes Mahindra Satyam from embarking on expansion projects of this kind.

“While Mahindra Satyam is disappointed that it cannot proceed with the centre, it reaffirms its commitment to future expansion in Victoria when circumstances allow.”

A Satyam Australia spokeswoman confirmed that the project had been cancelled, The Australian reports.

According to the report, Baksi committed to Mahindra Satyam paying back the undisclosed cash grant to the Brumby Government, which the company was given to lure it to Geelong.

In July the new owner of Satyam, Tech Mahindra, said it was committed to the project and was investigating its viability.

The future of the Geelong project, occupying 10ha at Deakin University, came into question after Satyam founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju admitted to a one billion dollars accounting scandal in January. (ANI)

Tech Mahindra to complete Satyam’s 75-mn dollars Australian project

Melbourne, July 1 (ANI): Tech Mahindra, the new owner of troubled Indian IT services firm Satyam, has for the first time confirmed its continued commitment to a 75 million dollars software development project in Geelong, Australia.

There were grave concerns that the project would be axed after Satyam Computer Services founder and chairman, B. Ramalinga Raju, admitted to a one billion dollar accounting fraud in January.

Tech Mahindra executive vice-chairman Vineet Nayyar said construction of the 10ha development on Deakin University grounds would begin as soon as discussions with the Victorian government were complete and the company is determined to complete the project.

However, he warned that certain aspects of the initial agreement, including funding, could change.

“We’re committed to the project … we’ve got due diligence in place,” said Nayyar, who is currently visiting Australia.

“The goal is to complete the project but we need to investigate how much investment is needed,” The Australian quoted him, as saying.

The Geelong project was announced more than a year ago with Satyam as its main financial backer in partnership with the Victorian state government, the City of Greater Geelong and Deakin.

The software hub promises to create 2000 jobs, a much-needed boost for the region in the wake of industry retrenchments. (ANI)

Satyam-linked Maytas in talks to restructure debt

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): Cash-strapped builder Maytas Infra Ltd is negotiating with its 17 lenders, including State Bank of India (SBI), according to official sources.

“We have appointed certain committees. We will have a project management committee. We have also constituted an audit committee, banking and financing committee and the legal committee and in these committees, the project management committee… We have also included others like ILFS, ICICI bank, SBI. Our main task is to evaluate the project and restore the confidence with the customers and vendors,” said K Ramalingam, Chairman, Maytas Infra Ltd, at a news conference in New Delhi.

The company will hire SBI Capital Markets to implement the restructuring.

The board was expected to pursue five billion rupees in receivables from customers as part of a mandate to revive the company that has seen orders being cancelled and customers worrying over the company’s credibility.

Maytas, which is controlled by the family of Satyam’s former chairman Ramalinga Raju, has orders worth 85 billion rupees.

It was also awarded a 150-billion-rupee metro project in Hyderabad, but Maytas missed a deadline to tie up funds for the project.

The company has been under the government’s scanner since early January when Raju resigned from Satyam after revealing profits at the outsourcer had been falsified for years. In April, Satyam’s government-appointed board sold a 31 percent stake in the outsourcer to Tech Mahindra Ltd after a global bidding to help revive the company.

Shares in Maytas, whose market value has plunged three-quarters to 49 million dollars since early January, rose by its daily limit of five percent to 41.05 rupees in a flat Mumbai market on Tuesday. (ANI)

Satyam-linked Maytas in talks to restructure debt

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): Cash-strapped builder Maytas Infra Ltd is negotiating with its 17 lenders, including State Bank of India (SBI), according to official sources.

“We have appointed certain committees. We will have a project management committee. We have also constituted an audit committee, banking and financing committee and the legal committee and in these committees, the project management committee… We have also included others like ILFS, ICICI bank, SBI. Our main task is to evaluate the project and restore the confidence with the customers and vendors,” said K Ramalingam, Chairman, Maytas Infra Ltd, at a news conference in New Delhi.

The company will hire SBI Capital Markets to implement the restructuring.

The board was expected to pursue five billion rupees in receivables from customers as part of a mandate to revive the company that has seen orders being cancelled and customers worrying over the company’s credibility.

Maytas, which is controlled by the family of Satyam’s former chairman Ramalinga Raju, has orders worth 85 billion rupees.

It was also awarded a 150-billion-rupee metro project in Hyderabad, but Maytas missed a deadline to tie up funds for the project.

The company has been under the government’s scanner since early January when Raju resigned from Satyam after revealing profits at the outsourcer had been falsified for years. In April, Satyam’s government-appointed board sold a 31 percent stake in the outsourcer to Tech Mahindra Ltd after a global bidding to help revive the company.

Shares in Maytas, whose market value has plunged three-quarters to 49 million dollars since early January, rose by its daily limit of five percent to 41.05 rupees in a flat Mumbai market on Tuesday. (ANI)

Satyam inflated sales by 47.46 billion rupees, says CBI

New Delhi, Apr 28 (ANI): The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has said that the fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services inflated sales by 47.46 billion rupees.

The CBI said that with the help of cyber forensic techniques, it was able to decipher modus operandi of Satyam corporate fraud.

“It happened like this-the accused were hiding some of the invoices that was generated through Excel porting. As a result, the concerned business circles were not aware that such invoices are existing.

These invoices were not dispatched to the customers even. In fact these false invoices were generated for purpose of inflating the sales and thus inflating the revenue of the company. As a result of further investigation, individuals who generated and hidden these false invoices have been identified,” said Harsh Bahl, a CBIpokesman.

The bail application of former chairman of Satyam, Ramalinga Raju and others was dismissed by the trial court on April 25.

In early January, Ramalinga Raju shocked investors by saying profits had been overstated for years, putting in doubt the survival of a company once ranked as India’s fourth-largest software services exporter.

The government quickly stepped in and sacked the board to limit damage to India’s once-shining IT sector.

Satyam, which counts Citigroup Inc, Cisco Systems Inc. and General Electric among its clients, has not reported results since releasing its July-September figures in October.

Its accounts are in the process of being reconciled and restated. (ANI)

Satyam sale expected by mid-April – source

Financial bids for Satyam Computer will be submitted by next week, three banking sources involved in the deal said on Thursday, and the sale of the fraud-hit Indian outsourcer is likely to be completed by mid-April, another source with knowledge of the proceedings said.

“By April 9 we have to put in the final and financial bids,” one banker directly involved in the deal told Reuters.

The company’s government-appointed board had said last month it hoped to finalise a buyer by April 30.

“It is expected to be completed much earlier than that,” said another source, who is not allowed to speak to the media about the bidding process. “It should be completed in the next couple of weeks.”

A Satyam spokeswoman said the outsourcer would not make any comment on the bidding process.

She said the board of Satyam, headquartered in the southern city of Hyderabad, was expected to meet in Mumbai on Friday, but declined to comment on the agenda.

Satyam, whose market value has slid to about $530 million from $7 billion last May, is keen to find a new buyer to restore the confidence of its about 50,000-strong staff and more than 600 clients.

The company plunged into a crisis in January after its founder and chairman Ramalinga Raju quit after revealing profits had been overstated for years and assets falsified. Raju is being held in jail.

Indian engineering conglomerate Larsen and Toubro and mid-sized outsourcer Tech Mahindra are among the suitors, and local media have said U.S. private equity WL Ross and Co was also in the race.

Ross called Satyam “interesting” on CNBC TV on Wednesday, but declined further comment due to India’s confidentiality rules. Ross has invested $120 million in two Indian firms, including $82 million in low-cost airline SpiceJet.

Analysts have said Satyam looks attractive because of its long list of marquee clients, including General Electric and Qantas Airways, and due to the plunge in its market value.

However, bidders face a tough job in valuing the company, due to uncertainty about its accounts and legal liabilities arising from the lawsuits filed in the United States by its shareholders.

Last week, India’s diversified Spice Group, a potential suitor for Satyam, said it would not proceed with its bid for now as it has not got the desired level of transparency.

Satyam founder Raju’s custody extended for two more days

Hyderabad, Mar 21 (ANI): Satyam Computer Services founder B. Ramalinga Raju, his brother Rama Raju and ex-Chief Financial Officer Vadlamani Srinivas23. were taken into custody for two more days by Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Saturday.

The XIV Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate has granted permission to the CBI to keep the trio in custody for two more days.

The CBI has said that it wants to question the accused on new disclosures.

A seven-member CBI team, set up specially to investigate the 7,800 crore-fraud case, took the trio into their custody as per the court orders from the Chanchalguda Jail. (ANI)

Telstra cancels 32 m dollar deal with Satyam

Melbourne, Mar.17 (ANI): Australian software major Telstra has dumped scandal-ridden outsourcing partner Satyam from an applications support contract believed to be worth 32 million dollars a year.

EDS will pick up the embattled Indian outsourcing firm’s IT contracts with Telstra, sources told The Australian.

Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo, who leaves the company on June 30, sat on the board of EDS before joining TELCO in 2005.

Telstra declined to confirm or deny having dropped Satyam, saying the decision about its supply arrangements with individual vendors would not be announced to the media.

It is understood new Satyam chief executive A.S. Murty flew to Australia last week in a last-ditch bid to retain the Telstra contract.

Sources said Satyam put a compelling case to stay on Telstra’s books, but its financial fraud scandals proved its undoing.

Satyam customers were put on notice in January when co-founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju admitted to inflating the company’s cash reserves by a billion dollars.
The fallout from the scandal has led National Australia Bank to re-evaluate its relationship with the outsourcer.

NAB has delayed plans to send several core technology functions to Satyam’s Indian operations.

The decision was made by a Telstra advisory board, which received advice from a US tender management company, sources said.(ANI)

CBI takes Satyam’s Raju, four others into custody

Hyderabad, Mar10 (ANI): The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Tuesday took into custody Satyam’s founder Ramalinga Raju and four other accused for interrogation.ccording to police officials, the accused were picked up from the Chanchalguda Jail at 9.30 a.m.

The Fourteenth Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate S. Samuel Victor Emmanuel on Monday sent all the accused to CBI custody for seven days from Tuesday.

Besides Raju and his brother Rama Raju, the CBI would also be quizzing the company’s former Chief financial officer (CFO) Vadlamani Srinivas and audit house Price Waterhouse’s partners S. Gopalkrishnan and Talluri Srinivas in connection with Satyam-fraud case.

On March 3, the CBI had filed a petition seeking seven days custody of Raju brothers, former Satyam CFO V. Srinivas and the two sacked auditors of PwC, which audited Sataym’s accounts.

On February 20, the CBI had constituted a multi-disciplinary investigation team for the probe.

On January 7, Ramalinga Raju confessed to fraudulent manipulation of accounts over several years by inflating the company’s profits and assets. (ANI)

CLB asks government to appoint four nominee directors for Maytas Infra

New Delhi, Mar 5 (ANI): The Company Law Board (CLB) on Thursday asked the government to appoint four nominee directors on the board of Maytas Infra.

One of the four nominees would be the chairman of the board, it said.

The CLB has rejected the government’s petition to supersede the Maytas Infra board.

The Law Board said that Maytas Infra authorizes the central government to appoint four nominees directors on the board of the company.

The Law Board also ruled that without the prior approval of the CLB, no government agency should initiate any punitive action against these nominee directors.

The government is probing the Maytas Infra and several other companies, which are linked to disgraced Satyam Computers Services founder Ramalinga Raju.

Earlier, the government had extended the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) probe from Satyam to Maytas Infra and Maytas Properties suspecting a fraud in the company’s dealings.

Union Minister for Corporate Affairs Prem Chand Gupta informed that the government has found evidences of involvement of both the companies in the Satyam scandal, which entails fabrication of accounts, money laundering, round-tripping of money and fraudulent diversion of funds. (ANI)

Multi-dimensional body to probe Satyam fraud: CBI

New Delhi/ Hyderabad, Feb 19 (ANI): The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has said it would form a multi-disciplinary investigation team to probe the accounting fraud at IT major Satyam Computer Services Ltd.

The CBI, which has taken over the probe, said a consultative mechanism was being worked out with all departments concerned.

“We are going through various aspects of this multi-dimensional and unique scam. We will soon register the case. The CBI now proposes to establish a multi-disciplinary investigation team with headquarters at Hyderabad. A joint consultative and coordination mechanism is being worked out with concerned ministries, departments and institutions for providing necessary assistance to the CBI,” said Harsh Behl, a CBI spokesman.

Meanwhile, a city court in Hyderabad has dismissed the bail petitions of Satyam founder B Ramalinga Raju, his brother Rama Raju and former CFO V Srinivas, all of them whom are lodged in the Chanchalguda Jail here.

A case has been filed against Raju under Sections 120-B (criminal conspiracy), 406 (criminal breach of trust), 420 (cheating), 468 (forgery for cheating) and 477-a (fraudulent cancellation of securities) of IPC.

Raju had disclosed a financial fraud in the company to the tune of Rs 7,800 crore by inflating profits and showing fictitious assets where none existed. (ANI)

Hyderabad court to hear SEBI’s plea

Hyderabad, Feb 18 (ANI): A city court in Hyderabad will hear a petition filed by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) to question Satyam Computers former Chief Financial Officer, Vadlamani Srinivas and sacked Price Waterhouse auditors S Gopalakrishnan and Talluri Srinivas.

On Tuesday, the sixth Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate reserved orders for Wednesday after hearing arguments over SEBI’s petition.

Earlier, the SEBI had interrogated Ramalinga Raju, former chief of embattled Satyam Computer Services Limited, and his brother, Rama Raju.

Meanwhile, Minister of Corporate Affairs Prem Chand Gupta said the government has ordered the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to probe the accounting fraud in IT major Satyam Computer Services Ltd.

“While the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) under his ministry had been given three-months to wrap up its probe into the Satyam scam, no time frame has been set for CBI,” Gupta said.

He refused to launch an investigation into accounts of the companies audited by Price Waterhouse, the statutory auditors for Satyam.

Andhra Pradesh Police on Monday issued an order recommending a CBI probe into the scam. (ANI)

Central Bureau of Investigation to probe Satyam fraud

New Delhi, Feb 17 (ANI): Corporate Affairs Minister P. C. Gupta has said the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) would probe the Satyam fraud.

Other investigative agencies probing the fraud however would continue with their work, Gupta said.

“The case has been handed over to CBI. As far as Serious Frauds Investigation Office (SFIO) and other investigative agencies are concerned, they will continue to carry on with their job. The CBI would look into all aspects including the criminal aspect,” he added.

Satyam, India’s software exporter ranked fourth, was plunged into a crisis after its founder-Chairman Ramalinga Raju quit after disclosing that profits had been overstated for years and $1 billion of cash and bank balances did not exist.

Ramalinga Raju, his brother Rama Raju, former Chief Financial Officer Srinivas Vadlamani were subsequently interrogated and are currently held in a jail in Hyderabad.

Satyam shares have fallen sharply since mid-December, first on a planned deal to buy related companies and then after founder Ramalinga Raju quit on January 7, disclosing profits had been overstated for years. (ANI)

Satyam says client confidence is improving

Mumbai, Feb 12 (ANI): Kiran Karnik, Chairman of the Satyam board, has said that Satyam Computer Services Limited is reassuring wary clients about its long-term prospects.

“There is now greater comfort. People know that the company now is financially stable. Now many of them are asking me questions related to long-term future. Which again is obviously something we are worried about. I share with them about ten days. We will be able to tell them what is the outlook for the future and then they’ll make their decision,” said Kiran Karnik.

He told reporters Satyam was in a position to pay employee salaries for February mainly from receivables, and said arranged bank funding would be coming in a few days.

Karnik said Satyam had picked up some additional work, which showed it was back on track, but noted client concerns remained.

Last week, Satyam said it had secured six billion rupees in bank loans to meet its short-term operational needs.

Satyam was plunged into a crisis last month after its founder Ramalinga Raju quit after disclosing profits had been overstated for years and one billion dollars of cash and bank balances did not exist.

On February 3, a Satyam spokeswoman said that the company had been awarded 15 new contracts in January.

In a staff newsletter dated February 9, Satyam said it had got assurances from “significant majority” of customers that they would continue their ties.

Satyam also said in the newsletter that A.S. Murty, its new chief executive, would meet with key customers in the next two to three weeks.

Satyam’s government-appointed board meets in Mumbai on Thursday, and Karnik has said a long-term action plan, including a possible sale, would be ready in the next week or so. (ANI)

Andhra Assembly proceeds suspended over Satyam controversy

Hyderabad, Feb 11 (ANI): A day after a stormy session of the Uttar Pradesh budget assembly, the Andhra Pradesh Assembly too experienced a ruckus over Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy’s alleged links with former Satyam Computers Chairman B. Ramalinga Raju.

According to the opposition, the newspaper “Sakshi”, owned by Reddy’s son Jagmohan was funded by Raju. This, they said, showed the deep relations between Raju and Reddy family.

It was also suspected that Jagmohan’s wealth was invested in Maytas Infra, headed by Raju’s son Teja.

Opposition MLAs from parties, including the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), the Communist Party Of India (CPI) and the Communist Party of India- Marxist (CPI-M) were suspended for raising a hue and cry over the issue.

The suspension was opposed and the ruling Congress came in for severe criticism.

The assembly session has been suspended for an indefinite time period. (ANI)

Satyam to announce long-term plan next week – chairman

The board of fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services Ltd will decide on a long-term action plan, including a possible sale, in the next 7 to 10 days, its chairman said on Monday.

Kiran Karnik, who was last week appointed by the government as the chairman of the Satyam board, told Reuters a clear picture would be available by the middle of next week.

Satyam has been battling for survival after founder and former chairman Ramalinga Raju disclosed last month that profits had been overstated for years in the country’s biggest corporate scandal.

The fund-starved outsourcer firm, whose clients include General Electric and Coca Cola, has borrowed 6 billion rupees ($123 million) from banks to meet short-term capital needs.

“Now the short-term crisis has been taken care of. Once the fire-fighting is over, everybody is curious to know where things are moving,” Karnik said.

“We will chart out a long-term roadmap in the next 7 to 10 days and make a recommendation to the government that may include all possibilities. The government has to decide.”

“Things will be clearer by the middle of next week.”

Top engineering firm Larsen & Toubro controls about 12 percent of Satyam and has not ruled out raising its stake, while diversified Indian business houses Spice Group and Hinduja Group have also shown interest.

The board has appointed Goldman Sachs and another Indian investment bank to find a strategic bidder for the company.

The Economic Times newspaper said earlier on Monday Satyam would trim its sales staff in overseas locations to help cut costs and to repay debts to creditors, but Karnik said they were not in a hurry to shed workforce.

“We are not in a hurry (to trim employees count). We’ll have to look at it,” he said. “Obviously there is a financial crisis. Cost-control measures are being taken.”

Satyam scandal leaves small investors nursing their losses

Kanpur, Jan 29 (ANI): Many small time investors are faced with uncertainty as they try and cope with the losses incurred by them in the stock market due to financial fraud by IT service provider the Satyam.

The effects of the Satyam scandal are reverberating in the stock exchange of Uttar Pradesh.

“If scandals like Satyam do keep on happening, then the recession period which we are facing currently may have to face more than that in future. In America, 16 banks failed. Similarly banks failed in Europe and Japan but luckily not a single bank failed in India but after this Satyam scandal, the economy got a shock,” said Sushil Kanodia, share broker.

Amidst this major fraud, small investors and brokers are becoming skeptical about investing their money.

” If big companies like Satyam does such kind of frauds then it would be difficult for the small investors to invest their money. It would be difficult for us to trust these companies. There is no such company on which an investor can rely upon and take a stand,” said Rita, an investor.

On January 7, Ramalinga Raju, the founder and former chairman of Satyam, confessed to planning of rupees 7,136 crore fraud over several years by inflating the company’s profits and assets. (ANI)

Raju brothers, Srinivas bail plea dismissed

Hyderabad, Jan. 28 (ANI): A city court on Wednesday rejected the bail plea of Satyam’s tainted founder Ramalinga Raju, former managing director Rama Raju and former CFO Vadlamani Srinivas.

The hearing of separate petition related to the bail application and police custody of SRSR Holding general manager Gopala Krishna Raju is scheduled for Thursday.

Ramalinga Raju’s held stakes in Satyam through SRSR Holding, which is promoted by Raju’s family.

Ramalinga Raju, Rama Raju and Srinivas will remain in judicial custody till January 31.

Earlier, Raju filed a revision petition in Andhra Pradesh High Court against his police custody.

Police stepped up their investigation into the case, having charged Ramalinga Raju and B. Rama Raju with criminal conspiracy and forgery after Raju admitted profits had been falsified for years and quit.

A case has been filed against Raju under Sections 120-B (criminal conspiracy), 406 (criminal breach of trust), 420 (cheating), 468 (forgery for cheating) and 477-a (fraudulent cancellation of securities) of IPC.

Raju had disclosed a financial fraud in the company to the tune of Rs 7,800 crore by inflating profits and showing fictitious assets where none existed. (ANI)