Reading Time: 2 minutes
- In India, to import something from abroad, you could either pay directly to the foreign exporter or ask a bank to pay on your behalf (Buyer’s Credit).
- For the buyer’s credit, most Indian importers prefer foreign banks because of their low loan interest rates.
- But you can approach a foreign bank only if you get a local bank to be your guarantor (i.e., the local bank should guarantee payment to the foreign bank in case you default).
- To be your guarantor, the local bank would ask you to submit a security deposit along with an invoice & other relevant documents from the exporter.
- If you submit everything, the local bank—after due diligence—would issue an LOU (Letter of Undertaking) to the foreign bank stating that the foreign bank can pay the exporter on your behalf.
- Now, Nirav Modi (a diamond merchant) and his uncle Mehul Choksi (a renowned jeweller) are said to have bribed a few PNB (Punjab National Bank) officials at Brady House Branch (Mumbai) to issue LOUs without any security deposit.
- And over seven years, PNB issued several LOUs (without any security deposit) to foreign banks, which paid exporters a sum of INR 11,000+ crores ($1.8 billion).
- In 2017-18, one of the “bribed” officials retired, and when Nirav Modi’s company asked for issuance of another LOU, the new officer that had replaced the retiree asked for the security deposit.
- When the company told this employee that they never had, in the past, deposited any security deposit, an investigation was initiated, and this fraud came to the surface.
- It was then found that it was not only the security deposit that was missing; even principal and interest were also never paid to PNB, which—being the guarantor—was making these payments to the foreign bank.
- In the ideal situation, issuing LOU and payments to foreign banks should automatically get updated into a bank’s Core Banking System (CBS)—a back-end system that processes daily banking transactions.
- But at PNB, it wasn’t happening automatically, and the staff was required to record the transactions in CBS manually.
- The “bribed officials” took advantage of this gap and never made any entry in the CBS, and so, these transactions never came to the notice of the bank auditors.
- Before CBI could start its proceedings in 2018, Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi fled the country.
Image courtesy of GarageStock through Shutterstock