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Crisis-Hit DHFL Headed for More Trouble, Auditors May Resign

Sources say the auditors may decide to resign ahead of the board meeting scheduled on June 13.
Sources say the auditors may decide to resign ahead of the board meeting scheduled on June 13.
Signboard of Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd. (DHFL) outside its office on the outskirts of Mumbai, January 31, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Francis Mascarenhas/Files
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With 24 hours to go for the board of directors to ratify Dewan Housing Finance Corporation’s (DHFL’s) fourth quarter numbers and 2018-19 financial account, the crisis-hit firm could be heading towards more trouble.

The meeting of board of directors is scheduled for July 13. However, sources said the two statutory auditors – Deloitte Haskins & Sells, and Chaturvedi & Shah – are yet to complete the process of auditing the company’s FY19 financial accounts. In June, DHFL got the market regulator’s nod to postpone announcing its financial results by two weeks.

Sources say the auditors may decide to resign ahead of the board meeting. This follows unsatisfactory response to auditors’ queries related to fund deployment by DHFL.

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Also read: Reliance Capital, DHFL Used ‘Box System’ to Avoid Disclosure, Report Finds

According to the Companies Act, 2013, statutory auditors are supposed to inform the ministry of corporate affairs, and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) before resigning. Facing pressure to meet repayment obligations, DHFL is in the midst of a lender-monitored restructuring and is set to sign an inter-creditor agreement on Thursday.

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A DHFL spokesperson refused to comment on whether the auditors have signed on the financial results. Sources aware of the developments said the auditors are yet to ask for a further extension to sign the final accounts.

Also read: Fear of Contagion Looms Over Financial Sector After DHFL's Payment Default

A Deloitte spokesperson said they do not comment on market speculation. There have been several instances of auditor resignations following the IL&FS crisis. Recently, Price Waterhouse & Co (PWC) resigned as an auditor of Eveready Industries. The auditor of Reliance Capital and Reliance Home Finance, PWC, quit both the accounts.

According to sources, auditors are under pressure to ensure there are no discrepancies in DHFL’s annual reports following allegations of fund diversion by the company through shell companies. DHFL, however, has refuted these allegations.

By arrangement with Business Standard.

This article went live on July twelfth, two thousand nineteen, at forty minutes past five in the evening.

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