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The ministry’s move means there will be no meeting of the company’s board on Saturday.
Corporate affairs minister P.C.Gupta didn’t name the nominee directors on Friday, but it is likely that the board it puts in place will have a few bureaucrats, bankers and software industry heavyweights.
The announcement came even as no attempt was made to arrest Satyam Computer Services Ltd’s chairman, who on Wednesday shocked peers, analysts and investors with the admission of falsifying accounts to the tune of at least Rs7,136 crore. The head of India’s stock market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) said it would file a complaint against Raju only after completing its investigation.Sebi also announced that companies that are part of the Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex index, the National Stock Exchange’s Nifty index, and some others would have to have their financial results reviewed by a committee appointed by the regulator.
Five more class action suits were filed on Day 3 of the Satyam scandal and the Indian Railways said it would likely cancel a contract it had awarded the software services firm.MCA’s action came after the Company Law Board, the apex legal and regulatory body governing companies in India, allowed it to: restrain the current board from doing anything (it ceased to be the firm’s board at 6pm on Friday); pick 10 nominee directors; and hold a board meeting within seven days. Five more lawsuits were filed in the US, taking the total number of suits filed against Raju or Satyam to seven.
The regulators also intensified their coordinated probe into the books of Satyam, Maytas Infra Ltd and Maytas Properties Ltd.The officials of the ministry of corporate affairs’ serious fraud investigation office (SFIO) have began inspecting the records of these three companies. The ministry has also seized Satyam’s books.
The ministry’s move means there will be no meeting of the company’s board on Saturday.
Corporate affairs minister P.C.Gupta didn’t name the nominee directors on Friday, but it is likely that the board it puts in place will have a few bureaucrats, bankers and software industry heavyweights.
The announcement came even as no attempt was made to arrest Satyam Computer Services Ltd’s chairman, who on Wednesday shocked peers, analysts and investors with the admission of falsifying accounts to the tune of at least Rs7,136 crore. The head of India’s stock market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) said it would file a complaint against Raju only after completing its investigation.Sebi also announced that companies that are part of the Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex index, the National Stock Exchange’s Nifty index, and some others would have to have their financial results reviewed by a committee appointed by the regulator.
Five more class action suits were filed on Day 3 of the Satyam scandal and the Indian Railways said it would likely cancel a contract it had awarded the software services firm.MCA’s action came after the Company Law Board, the apex legal and regulatory body governing companies in India, allowed it to: restrain the current board from doing anything (it ceased to be the firm’s board at 6pm on Friday); pick 10 nominee directors; and hold a board meeting within seven days. Five more lawsuits were filed in the US, taking the total number of suits filed against Raju or Satyam to seven.
The regulators also intensified their coordinated probe into the books of Satyam, Maytas Infra Ltd and Maytas Properties Ltd.The officials of the ministry of corporate affairs’ serious fraud investigation office (SFIO) have began inspecting the records of these three companies. The ministry has also seized Satyam’s books.
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