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Born in a jute trader's house in Rajasthan raised in Kolkata. Commerce graduate , completed Chartered Accountancy in 1980. Also acquired other degrees like ACS, Ph.D., MIIA (US) and a diploma in Journalism. 1980: started a financial consultancy firm, CRB Consultancy in Kolkata. Moved to New Delhi to join one of the country's leading registrars of companies. 1985: Established 'CRB Consultants,' a private limited company in New Delhi. 1992: The name of the company was changed to CRB Capital Markets (CRB Caps) and it was converted into a public limited company. CRB Caps was also very active in stock-broking having a card both on the BSE and the NSE.
Then followed mutual fund (CRB Mutual Fund) and CRB Share Custodial Services . 1992 to 1996 : collected money from the public through fixed deposits, bonds and debentures, mutual fund schemes. In mid 1990 he wrote a book Making Difference
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A+ rating given by CARE and upfront cash incentives of 7-10% attracted investors. CRB Mutual Fund In August 1994 , Bhansali launched CRB mutual funds, which raised Rs.230 crores through Arihant Mangal Growth Scheme. CRB Share Custodial Services followed. CRB share custodial services raised another Rs.100 crores in January 1995. CRB Corporation Ltd raised another Rs.84 crores through 3 public issues.
Between 1992 and 1995, in the post-Harshad Mehta scam (bear phase) he managed to raise close to Rs 900 crore. CRB Caps Networth grew from Rs.2 crores in 1992 to Rs.430 crores in 1996 this finally rose suspicion.
CRB Capital market ltd. offered various schemes like merchant banking , leasing and hire purchase , bill discounting and corporate funds management , fixed deposit and resources mobilization , mutual funds and asset management , international finance and forex operations. He floated around 133 subsidiaries and unlisted dummy companies and money was transferred to these dummy companies. CRB Share Custodian invested Rs.15 Crores in CRB Mutual Funds. CRB Corporation invested Rs.16 crores in CRB capital markets. Market value of CRB caps investments rose from Rs.76 crores to Rs.109 crores in 1995-96. Global outlook and timely foreign collaborations were also responsible for its success. Rigged Share prices through own money The Financial Wizardy was made possible with the help of Bhansalis trusted firms of auditors D P Bhaiya & co and Jain & Swaika-both old friends from Calcutta
CRB Capital Markets January 1995, raising a total of 176 crore in three years, compared to Kotak Mahindra Finance, a leading finance company, who over the same period raised less than Rs. 80 crore
CRB Mutual funds In August 1994, raised Rs 230 crore from the market through its Arihant Mangal CRB Growth Scheme. Another Rs.180 crore was raised from investors through fixed deposits. CRB Corporation LTD was originally set as a granite manufacturing company by Bhansali, but much of its activities were in finance area.This company raised Rs.84 core through three public issues between May 1993 and December 1995. CRB Share Custodial Services: another of Bhansalis company raised a further Rs.100 crore in January 1995 to set up operations. In the space of five years between 1992 and 1995, Bhansali managed to raise a total of close to Rs. 900 crore from the capital markets (when the market was going through the post-Harshad Mehta bear phase) and he became the chairman of the top three finance companies in India.
Nagpal Story
Investor: Varun Nagpal
Offending firm: CRB Group Offence: CRB did not maintain reserve requirements; the Reserve Bank stopped it from raising fresh deposits. Cheques bounced. CRB shut down its offices. Hole in the pocket: Rs 11.5 la (approx.)
retired supervisor from BEST. Donde -Rs. 1.5 lakh Her mother -Rs. 56000 Her husband-Rs 30000 son Rajeev -Rs.20,000.
SBI Findings
However in March97 SBI discovered the fraud
warrants
Bhansali used fake accounts in Chennai, Calcutta and
Bhansalis Justification
Overdrawn money was used to repay principal to the
fixed deposit holders Bhansali claimed he had no fraudulent intentions. Lawyer insisted that the account was an ordinary one.
government officials
Blame game between RBI and SEBI RBI claimed that it had no power to examine the asset
quality
In Dec94 SEBI conducted a routine investigation
Continued
Oct96 TFCI lodged complaint against CRB Caps
The Aftermath
ROLE OF CBI
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) locked and sealed the offices of the CRB Group.
Arrested six persons, including four directors (two from Bikaner and two from Mumbai)
The CBI also conducted simultaneous searches at 16 various places. The CBI froze the bank accounts of the group companies and seized incriminating files and other documents from the residence of the vice-president. Following rumors that Bhansali had fled India and was hiding in Hong Kong or Canada. The CBI sought Interpol's assistance to trace him.
ROLE OF RBI
The collapse of the CRB group seemed to be a fraud allowed by supervisors despite the regulations in place. Lack of clear communication channels between the banks, RBI and the government Frequent clashes occurred between RBI and SEBI in the media, The RBI claimed that it had no powers to examine the asset quality of the CRB group The bank further claimed that the powers were granted only in March 1997, when the RBI Act of 1934 was amended to include specific provisions for the purpose.
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ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
At one point, the Union finance ministry held a meeting everyday to solve CRB fiasco. In a meeting with SEBI, the finance minister criticized the regulator severely The government asked the RBI to prepare a panel of auditors asking to explore the possibility of making auditing of NBFCs a prerequisite to registration.
ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
In October 1998, the SEBI appointed an administrator for CRB's Arihant scheme finalized a scheme for payment to the unit holders. Under the scheme, the investors were prematurely paid Rs 4.95 per unit, which was its NAV as of 31 March 1998. When the administrator had taken over, the assets of the scheme comprised the fund's frozen bank accounts worth Rs 81 lakh, plus some dividends from investments.
There were a large number of listed (but thinly traded) and unlisted shares amounting to Rs 17.5 crore.
The (CBI) set up an Advisory Board on Banking, Commercial and Financial Frauds (ABBCFF) that is headed by a retired Deputy Governor of the RBI to help it crack corporate crime more efficiently.
1) Debt market got affected 2) This event have impacted the sentiment and trust of investors in the Indian financial market. 3) Scam leaves the Initial Public Offerings (IPO) market dead 4) An investor population stagnant at the official figure of 19 million 5) One of the senior official says that efforts to revive investor confidence have flopped because government measures have failed to match the investors own perceptions about the main cause of his woes.
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