PNB fraud touches Rs 12.6K cr as Nirav Modi firm in US files for bankruptcy (Roundup)

IANS  |  New Delhi 

The ongoing (PNB) fraud case took a turn for the worse on Tuesday as the reported an additional Rs 1,300 crore unauthorised transactions, taking the estimated quantum to around Rs 12,600 crore in the scam related to and owner of Gitanjali Gems,

In a 11.22 pm filing with the stock exchanges on Monday, the said: "In continuation to our filing with stock exchanges on February 14, 2018, we have to inform that quantum of reported unauthorised transactions can increase by $204.25 million."

Earlier on February 14, PNB, the second largest public sector in India, had said it had detected a $1.8 billion or Rs 11,300 crore, fraud in the Brady House Branch in On Tuesday, the said in regulatory filings with the stock exchanges that it had appointed a

In another development, Firestar Diamond Inc, the US company of Indian filed for bankruptcy in a court, under chapter 11.

According to the court filing at the Southern District Of on Monday, the firm listed assets and liabilities in the range of $50 million and $100 million. A Chapter 11 filing under the Bankruptcy code usually allows a company to reorganise its business.

The (CBI) had filed the first FIR in the scam on February 14 against Nirav Modi, his wife Ami, brother Nishal, uncle and his firms Diamond R US, Solar Exports and Stellar Diamond.

The CBI on Tuesday said it had questioned former and ICICI in connection with ithe fraud case.

"The agency also questioned the ICICI because it was the of a consortium of banks that sent money to Mehul Choksi's Gitanjali Group," a CBI official, who did not want to be named, said.

In the evening, a statement from ICICI said it was a lender of working capital to the of companies along with several other banks in the consortium.

It said its exposure was not the largest in the consortium and it had not lent any money to the group, nor did it have any buyer's credit exposure against LoUs to the two groups.

The CBI also questioned two PNB Managers, Nehal Ahad and Vimlesh Kumar, apart from two statutory auditors of the PNB.

The agency has till date arrested 12 persons in the case.

Keeping in view the biggest-ever banking fraud in India, the government on Tuesday set a deadline of 15 days for public sector banks (PSBs) to examine all non-performing assets above Rs 50 crore for possible fraud and to identify operational and technical gaps.

"PSB MDs directed to detect frauds and consequential wilful default in time and refer cases to CBI. To examine all NPA accounts > Rs 50Cr for possible fraud. Involve ED/DRI for PMLA/FEMA/EXIM violations if any," said in a tweet on the Finance Ministry's Twitter handle

He also said that executive directors and chief technological officers of the PSBs have to prepare a blueprint for combating increasing risks.

With the escalation of the fraud amount, the bank's shares tanked on the bourses. The bank's stocks closed 12.11 per cent down on Tuesday at BSE at Rs 98.35 per share.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 27 2018. 19:52 IST
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