Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Tuesday, 19 January 2010 - Lax Indian rules still problem after Satyam fraud
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • Obama aide accuses Fox of operating as GOP arm | 13 October 2009
  • India minister says had candid talks with Pakistani | International | | 28 September 2009
  • Groupon raises $950 million in financing | | 11 January 2011
  • Shaolin temple will not go public: state media | 1 January 2010


    Forum Views () Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : Lax Indian rules still problem after Satyam fraud

    Yahoo! My Yahoo! Mail More Yahoo! Services Account Options New User? Sign Up Sign In Help Yahoo! Search web search Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Singapore Asia Pacific World Lax Indian rules still problem after Satyam fraud By ERIKA KINETZ,AP Business Writer - 1 hour 26 minutes ago Send IM Story Print MUMBAI, India – One year after the founder of Satyam Computer Services made an astonishing confession to the largest fraud in Indian corporate history, many say that what really sets R. Ramalinga Raju apart is not his malfeasance, but the fact that he got caught. "To think there aren't other companies that dabble in less than forthright practices, to believe that other companies are not doing this kind of thing is naive," said Sharmila Gopinath, research manager at Hong Kong's Asian Corporate Governance Association. The group released a 55-page white paper on Indian corporate governance Tuesday, which suggests that many of the conditions that helped facilitate Raju's $2.5 billion fraud still exist, despite efforts to reform. The Satyam scandal stunned India and raised questions abroad about the risks of investing in a country where improvements in regulations and corporate governance haven't kept pace with its rapid rise in economic and financial clout. With creaking infrastructure and a fast-growing population, India more than ever needs reputable markets to attract and channel private investment capital. The report draws on the views of more than a dozen foreign institutional investors, like the California Public Employees' Retirement System, auditors, like KPMG, and law firms, like White & Case. Their chief complaint? Controlling shareholders have too much power, a situation with roots in Indian culture and the nation's corporate regulations. "The balance of power between the promoters and other shareholders is out of kilter," said Jamie Allen, the group's secretary general. If that relationship isn't better calibrated, he said, foreign institutional investors _ who poured $17.5 billion into Indian equities last year _ could lose confidence in India's nascent capital markets. Some, he said, already have. Many Indian businesses are rooted in old family empires run by men who are happy to take money from public shareholders but loathe to cede control. As a result, minority shareholders and independent directors often have little real power. That, plus inadequate regulation and lax oversight, means controlling shareholders can often manipulate a public company for their personal profit, critics say. "India is undergoing a generational transformation," said Nishith Desai, one of Mumbai's best-known corporate lawyers. "Twenty or 30 years ago, India was very feudalistic, full of black money, bad practices, and no accountability." Punitive tax rates of up to 97.5 percent in the late 1970s encouraged corporate sleight of hand. "Everybody did business in the black. You were not accountable to anybody. You showed poor results and false losses. You cheated the government, employees and shareholders," he said. Economic liberalization in the early '90s _ and corporate tax rates that plummeted to 34 percent _ began to change that culture, but, he added: "Some of the old habits and legacy continue." "The founders of a company forever thought they are the proprietors," Desai said. "They don't want to be answerable to outsiders. They've yet to understand the value good governance brings to a company." ACGA argues that the best way to fix the problem is to empower institutional investors. It was, after all, a rare revolt by minority shareholders _ who objected to Raju's plan to drain Satyam's cash reserves to buy two property companies run by his sons _ that brought Satyam down. Today, Raju and nine others, including two auditors from Price Waterhouse, face charges including criminal conspiracy, cheating and forgery at a court in southern India. Weak voting rights and poor disclosure rules hinder the ability of institutional investors to play watchdog, ACGA says. Voting by show of hands, the norm in India, gives every investor one vote, irrespective of the number of shares he or she owns. Proxies for foreign investors aren't allowed to vote by hand count or speak at shareholder meetings under Indian law. Poor disclosure rules mean investors don't necessarily know what a company's holdings are and give controlling shareholders scope to abuse corporate linkages by, for example, overpaying for the assets of a private company they also own. Satyam is a case in point. Government investigators say Satyam executives started over 300 companies to invest in real estate and agriculture, buying over 1,000 properties with fraudulently acquired funds. Those activities dragged the company far from its core software services business. But because Indian companies aren't required to disclose such corporate linkages, shareholders didn't find out how far Satyam had strayed _ and how close they were to owning a property company rather than an IT company _ until long after the fraud came to light. Weak audits also don't help, ACGA says. They argue that India's auditing industry is too fragmented and needs an independent regulator. Auditors also complain of getting such a run-around from Indian banks that they can't independently validate bank statements and invoices in time to meet audit deadlines, Gopinath said. "Accounting firms started sending people to banks and having them sit there and hound people until they get what they want," she said. "If you don't validate things yourself, the likelihood of getting conned is quite high." To be sure, not all companies are bad. Infosys, notably, has a stellar reputation, and ACGA says the top 50 to 100 Indian companies _ of which Satyam was one _ have generally good governance. Indian regulators did implement some reforms in the wake of the Satyam scandal. The Securities and Exchange Board of India in February 2009 mandated greater disclosure of the holdings of controlling shareholders and any pledging of those shares. The regulator may also mandate the publication of balance sheets twice a year instead of once a year, which could help fill in holes and inconsistencies found in the unaudited quarterly reports of many Indian companies. In December, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs published a new set of voluntary corporate governance guidelines, designed to improve board oversight and auditor independence and create a whistleblowing mechanism. But ACGA says those measures aren't enough, and some worry that perversely, Raju's stunning fall may make it harder to root out fraudsters, who will now likely work harder to evade detection. Raju, Gopinath said, was a victim mostly of bad timing. "If he'd waited, nobody would have known," she said. "Nobody would have been the wiser." Recommend Send IM Story Print Related Articles Universal Studios resort in SKorea to open in 2014 AP - 31 minutes ago Google probing possible inside help on attack Reuters - 48 minutes ago Japan Airlines bankruptcy filing expected Tuesday AP - 52 minutes ago China shares end up slightly, c.bank move caps gains Reuters - 58 minutes ago Nikkei falls 0.8 pct as stronger yen hits exporters Reuters - 1 hour 3 minutes ago News Search Top Stories Prince William arrives in Australia Venezuela seizes three banks, orders two closed Kraft set to take over Cadbury after sweetened offer Babies pulled from the Haitian rubble Obama's first State of the Union address set for January 27 More Top Stories » ADVERTISEMENT Most Popular Most Viewed Most Recommended Surrounded by thieves, father digs for precious US visa Obama surprises Michelle with birthday dinner Saab drivers hit the road to support car brand Wall Street sell-off hits Asian shares Toyota to double global hybrid output: report More Most Viewed » Beat the blues by going to bed early: study Huge tomb found at Egypt's Saqqara pyramid Woman who saved Anne Frank's diary dead at 100 Scientists praise Obama as Doomsday clock reset More Most Recommended » Elsewhere on Yahoo! Financial news on Yahoo! Finance Stars and latest movies Best travel destinations More on Yahoo! News Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Subscribe to our news feeds Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS » More news feeds | What are news feeds? Also on Yahoo Answers Groups Mail Messenger Mobile Travel Finance Movies Sports Games » All Yahoo! Services Site Highlights Singapore Full Coverage Most Popular Asia Entertainment Photos Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Community | Intellectual Property Rights Policy | Help

    Other News on Tuesday, 19 January 2010
    Iran opposition urges protests on Revolution day
    Ukraine hospital blast leaves 7 dead, 17 missing: officials
    Google pledges cooperation with German competition probe
    Wall Street sell-off hits Asian shares
    Israeli PM holds historic joint cabinet meeting in Berlin
    Yanukovich leads Tymoshenko in Ukraine polls
    Iran hails UN indecision over further sanctions
    US-TECH Summary
    British tourist, several Egyptians killed in storms
    Turkey blocking 3,700 websites, reform needed: OSCE
    Movie Critic Roger Ebert Blasts Rush Limbaugh, Says He Should Be Horse-Whipped
    UK High Court rules for Nokia vs IPCom
    Iraq instructs lawyers to take on Blackwater cases
    Germany warns Iran it faces new sanctions |
    Gunmen kill 5 people at Baghdad aid office
    ASML Q4 order book seen to signal tech rebound
    Turk who shot Pope John Paul released from prison
    Toronto 18 bomb plotter gets 12 years |
    Handset market recovery in focus after weak 2009
    Iraq instructs lawyers to take on Blackwater cases |
    Moderate quake rocks Guatemala, Salvador; no damage |
    Iraqis authorize government to sue Blackwater
    Somali pirates free oil tanker for record ransom |
    Iran city prosecutor assassinated: report |
    Israel and Vatican negotiating over holy sites
    UK High Court rules for Nokia vs IPCom
    Major attacks in Afghanistan's capital
    Taliban militants attack Afghan capital; 12 killed
    Obama joins honors for slain civil rights leader
    Lending a hand: Ways the Obamas have helped out
    US soldier born in Haiti asks to leave Afghanistan
    Apple to host event January 27, tablet expected |
    Civil rights icon King remembered in hometown
    Thai Cabinet replacements take oath of office
    Sanctions 'must end' before nuclear talks: N.Korea
    5 people shot to death in southeast Texas
    Exxon tanker loses power at Prince William Sound
    US man in Cambodia arrested on child porn charge
    Calif. woman killed in Colo. heli-skiing accident
    Militants kill anti-Taliban militiaman in Pakistan
    FDA debates tougher cancer warning on tanning beds
    Nepal hands over detained Tibetans to UN agency
    Analysis: Campaign traits carry over to presidency
    Rare bird's breeding ground found in Afghanistan
    Montana governor does it his own way
    FBI reviews cases where flawed evidence used
    Japan Airlines deal talks 'going well': KLM
    Golden Globes shines with TV audience boost
    Stead, Pinkney win top children's book awards
    Singer Billy Bragg to stop paying taxes over bank bonuses
    Morocco's Berbers get their own TV channel
    Golden Globe parties full of celebs, booze, rain
    Country music hitmaker Carl Smith dies at 82
    Cancer-stricken actor Dennis Hopper divorcing wife |
    Singer Billy Bragg to stop paying taxes over bank bonuses |
    Avatar passes $500 million at U.S. box office |
    Midwives, Economists Forecast Baby Boom In U.K.
    British Physicists Tie Light In Knots
    U.K. Retailer Launches Gift List Registry For Newly Divorced People
    Bangladeshi Farmers Can Open Bank Account With Only 14 Cents
    Duck Hunters Trigger False Alarm At Texas Nuke Weapons Assembly Plant
    Kabul on high alert after brazen Taliban strikes
    Juncker bids to revamp eurozone governance
    Haiti aid picks up, doctors fear disease risk |
    LCD makers set for strong first half after Q4 slowdown
    Prince William arrives in Australia
    Venezuela seizes three banks, orders two closed
    Pro-Russia rivals face-off in Ukraine presidential run-off
    Afghan troops vital cog in anti-Taliban surge
    Apple tablet computer expected at January 27 event
    Kraft set to take over Cadbury after sweetened offer
    Taliban reconciliation unlikely: Gates
    In a first, Obama 'tweets' visit to aid center for Haiti
    Babies pulled from the Haitian rubble
    Jawbone makes talk pretty and smart
    Obama's first State of the Union address set for January 27
    Pakistani 'Al Qaeda' scientist trial begins in NY
    Gates praises India restraint after Mumbai attacks |
    Turkey should 'reform or abolish' Internet law: OSCE
    Defiant Obama defends first White House year
    Surrounded by thieves, father digs for precious US visa
    Sony to sign deal with Simon Cowell: report
    Apple to host event January 27, tablet expected |
    Prince William lands in Australia for 3-day visit
    LCD makers set for strong first half after Q4 slowdown |
    Taiwan to consider canceling Haitian debt
    Life sentence for ex-China Supreme Court justice
    Obama to seek $1.35 billion more for education
    Gates calls for closer defense ties to India
    US, Japan mark 50 years since security pact signed
    Report: More men get economic boost from marriage
    Extreme cold affects millions in northwest China
    Report: FBI illegally collected phone records
    Bodies of China peacekeepers lost in Haiti return
    Some evacuations lifted in Calif. as storm tapers
    Taiwan-China likely to delay trade talks: official
    Former gov backs Poizner in CA gubernatorial race
    Top Chinese judge jailed for life for graft
    Global minimum and maximum temperatures
    NBA star Mutombo honored for deeds in native Congo
    Portland man's body found in backyard sinkhole
    Cancer-stricken Dennis Hopper divorcing wife
    Depp says sexiest man title is a 'joke'
    Lax Indian rules still problem after Satyam fraud
    Japan Airlines bankruptcy filing expected Tuesday
    Taiwan raises overnight rate to rein in liquidity
    Universal Studios to build theme park in S.Korea
    Asian stocks lackluster ahead of more US earnings
    NBC chief defends role in late-night debacle |
    Sony to sign deal with Simon Cowell: report
    PAKISTAN
    Australia: Qantas execs not focus of Vietnam probe
    TV seen enjoying 2010, e-readers could struggle |
    Major redevelopment for Australian Open unveiled
    Obama's State of Union speech forces TV shuffle |
    Leno anticipates return to 11:30, lauds O'Brien
    Seoul shares rise helped by banks; gains limited
    Obama's State of Union speech forces TV shuffle
    Sony to sign deal with Simon Cowell: report |
    Japan Airlines set for bankruptcy filing
    Clean, green cycling emerges from doping era
    Obama's Popularity Slips But African Americans Still Supportive
    "Country Gentleman" Carl Smith dies, age 82
    Technology Enables Record Haiti Donations Via Mobile Giving
    Cancer-stricken Dennis Hopper divorcing wife |
    Cancer-stricken Dennis Hopper divorcing wife
    Election Watchdog Groups Fearful Of Electronic Voting Fraud In Massachusetts Senate Election
    Country Gentleman Carl Smith dies, age 82 |
    Small Plane Crashes In Iowa; 1 Wounded
    TV seen enjoying 2010, e-readers could struggle
    Seattle Middle School Suspends Students For Alleged Cyberbullying
    Former Sen. Norm Coleman Won't Run For Minnesota Governor
    Hunt for Russia's famed Amber Room leads to Nazi bunker
    FDA Will Not Regulate BPA For Now
    Depp says sexiest man title is a 'joke'
    Family Of Five Found Dead In Texas Home
    Israeli soldier discharged over protest sign
    Google postpones Android phone launch in China
    Cadbury melts into Kraft with $19bln takeover
    China urges flexibility on Iran, downplays sanctions |
    Google probing possible inside help on attack
    Yemen Shi'ite rebel leader alive but wounded |
    Iran police say public help in arresting "rioters"
    Pakistan blocks agenda at U.N. disarmament conference |
    Taliban attack shows tactical skill, military limits |
    Iran welcomes West's new 'realism' on nuclear drive
    Iran says arrests 4 suspects in prosecutor's killing |
    Iraq instructs lawyers to take on Blackwater cases |
    Nearly 150 dead in clashes in Nigerian city |
    Iran leader warns opposition ahead of revolution day |
    Cuba political prisoner tally drops in 2009 |
    Google postpones cellphone launch in China |
    China says Google no exception to the law |
    War refugees struggle to rebuild in Sri Lanka
    Pakistani soldier killed in Indian firing
    New York Times may charge for online content: report |
    Vietnam to try democracy activists for subversion
    Vietnam sentences 6 drug traffickers to death
    Reputed al-Qaida supporter faces NYC trial
    Google probing possible inside help on attack |
    Asian businessmen urged to protect Coral Triangle
    Taiwan's top prosecutor resigns over scandal
    Saving delta is at core of new Calif. water policy
    Koreas hold 'serious' talks amid North's threats
    China urges flexibility on Iran
    Pakistan TV station's reporters attacked
    Obama to visit Virginia elementary school
    Death sentence sought for former anti-graft chief
    Victim to speak `from the grave' in Peterson case
    The nation's weather
    Same-sex marriage judge dealt with other gay cases
    For La. Haitians, earthquake rekindles terror
    INSIDE WASHINGTON: Secret bill-writing on the rise
    Pakistani rupee weakens further; stocks post gains
    Asia shares mixed on Japan Airlines bankruptcy news
    Google postpones mobile phone launch in China
    China calls for stronger trade ties with India
    China tells Google to obey laws after exit threat
    France's Carrefour set for India breakthrough
    Pakistani July-Dec c/a deficit narrows to $1.758 bln
    S.Korea eyes record $12b resource spending in '10
    Avatar unlikely to match Titanic Oscar haul |
    Leno gives his side as O'Brien's exit deal delayed |
    FACTBOX-South Korea M&A deals in the pipeline
    Simon Cowell, Sony sign new TV, music, film deal |
    U.S. Military Begins Airdropping Of Food To Quake Ravaged Haiti
    New Jersey Poised To Swear In New Republican Governor
    Connecticut Sues Health Net For Data Breach Involving 446,000 Patients
    Firearm Scope Maker's Bible Verses On Products Used By Military Ignite Controversy
    Susan Boyle snubbed, gets no Brit Award nomination
    More Than 860,000 Pounds Of California Ground Beef Recalled
    Female artists lead Brit Award nominees
    Michelle Obama figure shown at London wax museum
    US Officials Update On Rescue Efforts In Haiti But Questions Remain
    US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
    Leno gives his side as O'Brien's exit deal delayed
    NYC judge to rule on tossing Letterman extort case
    Paris symbol of Jewish life reopens as jeans shop
    "Avatar" unlikely to match "Titanic" Oscar haul
    Pakistan's female squash player defies tradition
    Beijing chocolate theme park set to open
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    BlogMeter 1.01