HomeNewsOpinionLegal Matters | SEBI failed in prosecuting PwC because its hands were tied

Legal Matters | SEBI failed in prosecuting PwC because its hands were tied

If Indian regulators were rendered toothless in prosecuting Satyam’s auditors, it is only a testament to our legal system’s inadequacy in dealing with violators.

May 10, 2020 / 12:29 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

The partners and staff at the Indian offices of accounting giant PwC might be breathing a sigh of relief after the reprieve from the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT). The tribunal had overturned an order by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) barring network firms of the group from auditing any listed companies in India for a period of two years, along with other censures on individuals who signed the audit.

To be fair, SEBI’s goose was cooked even before the start of these proceedings. The Bombay High Court had restricted the scope of enquiry so narrowly that it was nigh impossible to find the firms guilty. The high court insisted that before it could take action against CAs/audit firms, SEBI was to establish that they were involved in manipulation or fabrication of the books of account, or to bring on record evidence to show that auditors had connived with the promoters. But auditors only audit/certify accounts that have already been created by accountants, and therefore manipulation/fabrication is simply out of the question.  And even the greatest audit scandal is likely to be a crime of omission rather than of commission, and therefore finding evidence of collusion would be akin to looking for snow in a desert. Naturally, SEBI failed.

Story continues below Advertisement

One could argue that perhaps not all is lost. The auditors who signed the balance sheet have been disbarred by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), while criminal proceedings are also underway for their role in the fraud. However, it should still unsettle us that the audit firm, the ultimate beneficiary, has managed to slip through the regulatory cracks, again!

To start with, let’s not forget that this is not the first major audit lapse in the Pricewaterhouse Coopers (as it then was called) network. Global Trust Bank was also audited by the group (and ironically, signed by one of the partners, S Gopalakrishnan, who signed Satyam’s balance sheet too) when it failed and had to be rescued by merging with Oriental Bank of Commerce. Disciplinary proceedings before the ICAI in that case are still pending after over 15 years.