THE KETAN PAREKH SCAM
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THE MAN WHO TRIGGERED THE CASH
Ketan Parekh [KP] was a chartered accountant by profession and used to manage a
family business, NH Securities started by his father. Known for maintaining a
low profile, KP's only dubious claim to fame was in 1992, when he was accused
in the stock exchange scam[1] . He was known as the 'Bombay Bull' and had
connections with movie stars, politicians and even leading international
entrepreneurs like Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer, who partnered KP in
KPV Ventures, a $250 million venture capital fund that invested mainly in new
economy companies. Over the years, KP built a network of companies, mainly in
Mumbai, involved in stock market operations.
The rise of ICE (Information,
Communications, and Entertainment) stocks all over the world in early 1999
led to a rise of the Indian stock markets as well. The dotcom boom[2]
contributed to the Bull Run[3] led by an upward trend in the NASDAQ[4].The
companies in which KP held stakes included Amitabh Bachchan Corporation
Limited (ABCL), Mukta Arts, Tips and Pritish Nandy Communications. He also
had stakes in HFCL, Global Telesystems (Global), Zee Telefilms, Crest
Communications, and PentaMedia Graphics KP selected these companies for
investment with help from his research team, which listed high growth
companies with a small capital base. According to media reports, KP took
advantage of low liquidity in these stocks, which eventually came to be
known as the 'K-10' stocks..
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The shares were held through KP's company, Triumph
International. In July 1999, he held around 1.2 million shares in Global. KP
controlled around 16% of Global's floating stock, 25% of Aftek Infosys, and 15%
each in Zee and HFCL. The buoyant stock markets from January to July 1999
helped the K-10 stocks increase in value substantially (Refer Exhibit I for BSE
Index movements). HFCL soared by 57% while Global increased by 200%. As a
result, brokers and fund managers started investing heavily in K-10 stocks.
Mutual funds like Alliance Capital, ICICI Prudential Fund and UTI also invested
in K-10 stocks, and saw their net asset value soaring. By January 2000, K-10
stocks regularly featured in the top five traded stocks in the exchanges (Refer
Exhibit II for the price movements of K-10 stocks). HFCL's traded volumes shot
up from 80,000 to 1,047,000 shares. Global's total traded value in the Sensex
was Rs 51.8 billion[5] . As such huge amounts of money were being pumped into
the markets, it became tough for KP to control the movements of the scrips.
Also, it was reported that the volumes got too big for him to handle. Analysts
and regulators wondered how KP had managed to buy such large stakes.
[1] When the interest rates were freed in
mid-1989, it made the price of both bonds and money more volatile, and increased
the link between the securities and money markets. With price volatility and
increased volumes, securities broking became a profitable activity. The rising
volumes were funded by banks through bank receipts (BR is a document issued by a
bank acknowledging that it has sold certain government securities to a party and
received payment). The scam came to light when RBI asked the SBI to show the
bank receipts, and it was found that Rs 6.22 billion not been reconciled and was
untraceable. The money involved in the scam was eventually ascertained to be
well over Rs 30 billion.
[2] The e-commerce revolution had led to a
massive upsurge in the value of technology stocks across the globe, especially
Internet ventures. This came to be known as the dotcom boom.
[3] A bull run is an uptrend in the stock
markets caused by the rise in the price of shares, sustained by buying pressure
of actual investors or news of favorable economic growth, decontrol and
political developments.
[4] The National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotation System (NASDAQ) is a US-based stock exchange, which
comprises largely of technology stocks. Started in 1971, NASDAQ is the first
screen-based, floor less trading system and the second largest stock market in
the US.
[5] In September 2002, Rs 48 equalled 1
US $.
THE FACTORS THAT HELPED THE MAN
THE SYSTEM THAT BRED THESE FACTORS
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