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FURQUAN MOHARKAN

THE BANKER

WHO CRUSHED

HIS DIAMONDSThe Yes Bank StoryForeword by Andy Mukherjee

PENGUIN BOOKS

CONTENTS

Foreword

Seeing Things Unfold

The First Signs of Trouble

The Birth of YES Bank

Soap Opera

The Bank’s Loan Story

Enter RBI, Exit Rana

Enter Ravneet Gill

Stretching It Too Long

The Mess Got Real

Doom’s Day

ED Investigations and Cobwebs

Defining Secrecy

Where Does Banking Go from Here?

Conclusion

Footnotes

The First Signs of Trouble

Soap Opera

The Bank’s Loan Story

Enter Rbi, Exit Rana

Enter Ravneet Gill

Stretching it too Long

Ed Investigations and Cobwebs

Acknowledgements

Follow Penguin

Copyright

PENGUIN BOOKSTHE BANKER WHO CRUSHED HIS DIAMONDS

Furquan Moharkan is a senior correspondent with Deccan Herald. He covers banking, financial institutions, markets, investments and the Reserve Bank of India. He completed his bachelor’s in business administration from Christ University, Bengaluru, and joined UBS’s India affiliate as an investment banker in the financial institutions group. Within a year, he answered his calling for writing and joined Deccan Herald’s business desk in Bengaluru.

Foreword

Rana Kapoor was certainly not the first Indian financier to behave badly. But what makes the story of his rise and fall compelling is the light it shines on a certain stage in India’s economic development, a period in which the innocent enthusiasm of the country’s 1990s reforms slowly gave way to cynical and pervasive rent-seeking. In a sordid display of greed and hubris, some private-sector bosses erected for their private gains vast edifices of assets with the help of money taken from other people, usually bank depositors, but later also mutual fund investors.

The start of this age coincided roughly with the 2004 launch of Kapoor’s YES Bank. So the intimate account Furquan Moharkan gives in The Banker Who Crushed His Diamonds—The YES Bank Story is not merely of one failed bank or one humbled banker; it’s the story of an era.

Since this period is far from over, the regulators should read this book as a cautionary tale rather than a history lesson. There’s a growing idea that India’s banking industry needs an influx of fresh capital; new licences need to be given to non-bank financial services firms and even non-financial conglomerates to enable them to run deposit-taking institutions. The question policymakers should ask of themselves after reading this book is: ‘We failed to catch most of Rana’s shenanigans, his wayward lending, and his many conflicts of interest. His board was even more ineffective. What makes us sure that we will do it right this time?’

The lay reader should pick up this book to know how badly the game is rigged. As Kapoor ran YES bank into the ground—and his successor spun fantastic yarns about raising survival capital—most (though not all) brokerage analysts and business television anchors decided to play along in cheerful complicity. Furquan lays bare the extent of the rot, and the pain it inflicted on an unsuspecting public. Hopefully, depositors and investors will be less trusting when they are being lied to the next time. While on paper India has robust banking regulations and supervision, the trappings of independent boards, and the attendant paraphernalia of auditors, rating agencies and a free press, the political economy renders them all into caricatures—an example of what economist Lant Pritchett calls an ‘isomorphic mimicry’ of developing countries to make their institutions look like those in the developed world.

In the YES Bank saga, the public was fooled several times over. In my own writing about the lender, I coined the term ‘price-to-truth ratio’, as the true measure of its elevated valuation. I also revealed that Morgan Credits and YES Capital, the two entities through which the Kapoor family held large stakes in the bank, had sold debentures to mutual funds to raise money for private ventures. The backing for the debentures came from covenants, or assurances structured around YES Bank’s stratospheric share price. Based on those assurances, rating companies issued lofty certificates of creditworthiness. ‘Retail investors probably have no idea they’re the ones financing Kapoor’s diamonds, on the basis of debt covenants as fluffy as cotton candy,’ I wrote.

The candy melted, the diamonds got crushed. Yes, there was a rescue, engineered by the authorities by roping in State Bank of India (SBI). Depositors didn’t suffer beyond seeing their money trapped for a while. Nor were equity investors made to lose their entire investment the way additional tier-one bondholders were wiped out. But the manner in which the authorities handled the rescue didn’t leave them with a template for dealing with future failures of deposit-taking institutions. As I write this foreword, a news article says that more than 60 per cent of insolvencies resolved by the bankruptcy tribunal in the July–September quarter of 2020 ended up in liquidation. That’s a bad omen for creditors when the tribunal starts admitting fresh cases after the pandemic. Out-of-court corporate restructuring in India has anyway gone haywire.

Furquan shows how the crisis at YES Bank was coded in its DNA of sharp practices and outright deceit. Harkirat Singh, one of the three Indian co-founders, was edged out by Rana Kapoor even before the bank got its licence. Ashok Kapur, who could have steered the lender in a very different direction, died in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attack. Even before that fateful day, Rana, the ‘control freak, maverick banker’, as one of Furquan’s numerous well-placed sources described him, had decided that he was the one in charge—even of selecting the tiles for the office floor. When his brother-in-law, Ashok, objected to this hyper-centralization, he found his cabin door locked. Rana is said to have told him: ‘There is no need for you to come to office from now. You are a non-executive chairman; just come for the board meetings.’

It’s the anecdotes Furquan has tapped from his experience in investment banking research and financial journalism that make this book rich in details of what went on behind the scenes. The report that UBS wrote in 2015—five years before the bank went

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