Sebi had
received 4,900 refund claims during the August-September exercise from the
bondholders of two Sahara companies --Sahara India Real Estate Corp Ltd
(SIRECL) and
Sahara
HousingInvestment Corp Ltd (SHICL), which had raised over Rs 24,000crore from
about three crore investors.
While Sahara maintains it has already repaid more than
93per cent of the outstanding dues directly to the concerned bondholders and
the remaining amount was just about Rs 2,500 crore, it deposited Rs 5,120 crore
to Sebi in December 2012towards the investor refunds as per Supreme Court
orders. Further money has been deposited by the group with Sebi subsequently
and it is currently in the process of raisingmore funds to ensure release of
its chief Subrata Roy from the jail.
Sebi began the refund process in May 2013, while
asking eligible investors to submit their claims. However, the refunds made so
far remain minuscule, although the regulator
has not so far made public the quantum of all such
payments. Sahara has been maintaining that Sebi should verify the refunds made
by it directly and claims to have submitted to
the regulator proof for nearly 75 per cent of refunds.
It also says that the remaining 25 per cent refund proof is lying in its Mumbai
godown to be given to Sebi.
Sahara also contends that bulk of its investors didn't
have bank accounts and other formal financial papers, the details of which have
been sought by Sebi. On the identification on Sahara's investors, Sebi has contested
in the court that addresses of many investors given
by Saharas were incomplete as only village name,
district and state is given without any house number or street/lane names.
On its part, Sahara has maintained that most investors
are from rural India and had no house numbers or street names. In the new
refund application form, Sebi had given a new
address format for rural investors, asking only
village name, post office, district and state as against additional details like
house number and street name for urban addresses.
In its latest
annual report for the year ended March 31, 2014, Sebi had disclosed having
received 3,612 refund applications involving 13,948 deposit accounts till that
time in the Sahara matter.
Of those
applications, Sebi made refunds in case of 445 applications involving an equal
number of deposit accounts for an aggregate amount of about Rs 1.25 crore
including interest
of about Rs
43.83 lakh. The other applications had deficiencies or fell under either
'mismatch' or 'multiple investment' category. "Out of the remaining 3,167
applications, in respect of
424
applications involving 1,683 deposit accounts, certain deficiencies were
observed in the applications/supporting documents submitted by the applicants
which were brought to
the notices
of the applicants for their clarification/rectification, and replies are
awaited from
them,"
Sebi said. Sebi also could not process 1,260 applications involving 7,159
deposit accounts as these were in multiple investment category, while 92 cases
involving 92 accounts did not meet
the extant
refund methodology adopted by the regulator. Besides, 1,776 applications
involving 4,395 accounts could not be processed because of being 'mismatch
category'.
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