Further to my last piece, it is quite startling to know that the last three years' Satyam annual reports state that the audit committee has no financial expert on it. According to the disclosure, the company had been unable to find an appropriate candidate. Now that seems to be incredibly lame. When the company could get a phenomenal board of directors consisting of domestic and international big-wigs, it is just impossible to believe that they were unable to find a financial expert. Maybe the company was unable to find a financial expert who would agree with their ways of transacting.
This puts even more of an onus on the auditors and the CFO. Both should have been in a position to highlight the discrepancies in the accounts. The question that amazes the most is how did the auditors provide for the cash balances without bank statements? If those bank statements existed, then were they forged? If they were forged, was the CFO aware of the same? Are audit firms in a position to identify forged bank statements?
Another important issue that comes to mind is that in the absence of a mandatory attendance requirement of independent directors, what was the board composition at the Satyam results' board meetings. Were the results questioned?
Leaving the Satyam issue aside, an important disclosure point has been raised with the merger of Bank of America and Merrill Lynch. Albeit a legal question, this still makes an investor want to have higher disclosure standards. Read the FT article on: