
New Delhi: As investigations into the Rs 11,400 crore scam at PNB gather momentum,
officials at overseas branches of other banks, where the fraudulently
issued Letter of Undertakings (LoUs) were encashed, are under scanner,
sources said.
Officials of Hong Kong branches of Indian lenders
including Allahabad Bank, State Bank of India (SBI), Union Bank, UCO
Bank and Axis Bank are part of the entire fraud which continued for 7
years.
As per the guidelines, the tenure for the encashment of
LoUs for the jems and jewellery sector is usually of 90 days and not 365
days -- the maturity period of most of the LoUs linked with the PNB
fraud, sources said, adding that the deviation from the usual practice
should have raised alarm in the minds of officials working at the Hong
Kong branch of other lenders.
But surprisingly this did not
happen till last month when PNB refused to honour LoU fraudulently
issued by some of the staff at its Brady House branch in Mumbai, sources
said.
Had someone raised alarm earlier, the quantum of fraud
could have been lower, sources said, adding that it is like alert
citizen informing police about some nefarious activity to authorities
for the further action.
As many as 11 Indian banks have
operations in Hong Kong. Branches of Allahabad Bank, UCO Bank, Union
Bank of India, Axis Bank, SBI, Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Canara
Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and Indian Overseas Bank are present in the
city state.
Among the lenders having a branch in Hong Kong,
country's largest lender SBI has already announced an exposure of USD
212 million to the PNB fraud involving Nirav Modi-promoted companies.
At
the same time, another public sector lender Union Bank of India's
exposure stood at USD 300 million, while UCO Bank has to realise USD
411.82 million.
Allahabad Bank suspects it exposure of around Rs 2,000 crore.
Last
week, fraud-hit PNB said it will honour its bonafide commitments and
entire liability will be known after the investigation.
The PNB
fraud pertains to issuance of fake Letters of Understanding (LoUs) to
companies associated with billionaire jeweller Nirav Modi by errant PNB
employees, which enabled these companies to raise buyers credit from
international branches of other Indian lenders.
Last month, PNB
had lodged an FIR with CBI stating that fraudulent LoUs worth Rs 280.7
crore were first issued on January 16. At the time, PNB had said it was
digging into records to examine the magnitude of the fraud.
In
the complaint, PNB had named three diamond firms - Diamonds R Us, Solar
Exports and Stellar Diamonds - saying they had approached it on January
16 with a request for buyers credit for making payment to overseas
suppliers.
PTI