Tag: Sameer Gehlaut

  • Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan amongst 500 Indians named in Panama Papers; Modi calls for a multi- agency probe

    Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan amongst 500 Indians named in Panama Papers; Modi calls for a multi- agency probe

    MUMBAI: In a shocking revelation, popular Bollywood icon Amitabh Bachchan and his daughter-in-law Aishwarya Rai Bachchan have been identified amongst 500 Indians with secret offshore accounts.

    Apart from the Bachchans, several business tycoons and industrialists’ names have also come up in the list including DLF promoter K P Singh and Indiabulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut, family members of the promoters of Apollo Tyres and a number of politicians.

    Two politicians who figure on the list are Shishir Bajoria from West Bengal and Anurag Kejriwal, the former chief of the Delhi unit of Loksatta Party, an Indian Express report read.

    According to latest update on the development, PM Modi has welcomed this investigation that is being termed by the media as the ‘greatest leak’ so far. Taking matters into hand, the government has  ordered a multi-agency team to investigate the 500 Indians, who were named in the Panama Paper.

    The team comprising of experts on tax and foreign exchange transactions, will work with financial crime-fighting agencies to investigate ‘the flow of information in each one of the cases.’

    This revelation comes as part of a new data leak  from an anonymous source through German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung which was later shared globally by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). In India, one of the leading dailies, The Indian Express was a part of the investigation. Together the media groups have investigated a massive leak of 11.5 million documents from Mossack Fonseca, a Panama based law firm.    According to the records, the listed individuals who have paid the firm for a secretive, lax regulatory system that helped them to set up offshore entities in tax havens around the world.

    ‘Amitabh Bachchan was appointed director in at least four offshore shipping companies set up in 1993. Similarly, Aishwarya Rai and her family members were registered in 2005 as directors of Amic Partners Limited. Her status was later changed to share holder before the company was dissolved in 2008. DLF promoters KP Singh acquired a company registered in British Virgin Islands in 2010. His family’s three offshore entities hold almost $10 million,’ the report further stated.

    While owning offshore funds by itself isn’t illegal, as per the Reserve Bank of India guidelines, citizens were not allowed to possess an overseas entity before 2003. The central bank allowed individuals to remit funds of up to $25,000 a year under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) a year later I 2004.

    In 2013, individuals were allowed to set up subsidiaries or invest in joint ventures abroad under the Overseas Direct Investment window. But the newspaper’s investigation claims that most of the offshore accounts set up by Indians identified in the list were done before 2013, which could render them illegal.

    Not just individuals, a close scrutiny of The Panama Papers also reveals details of hitherto unknown deals, in some cases involving the government, too,” Indian Express further revealed in its investigative report.

    Note: The information in this report has been sourced from The Indian Express, The Times of India, The Wire, and NDTV

     

  • Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan amongst 500 Indians named in Panama Papers; Modi calls for a multi- agency probe

    Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan amongst 500 Indians named in Panama Papers; Modi calls for a multi- agency probe

    MUMBAI: In a shocking revelation, popular Bollywood icon Amitabh Bachchan and his daughter-in-law Aishwarya Rai Bachchan have been identified amongst 500 Indians with secret offshore accounts.

    Apart from the Bachchans, several business tycoons and industrialists’ names have also come up in the list including DLF promoter K P Singh and Indiabulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut, family members of the promoters of Apollo Tyres and a number of politicians.

    Two politicians who figure on the list are Shishir Bajoria from West Bengal and Anurag Kejriwal, the former chief of the Delhi unit of Loksatta Party, an Indian Express report read.

    According to latest update on the development, PM Modi has welcomed this investigation that is being termed by the media as the ‘greatest leak’ so far. Taking matters into hand, the government has  ordered a multi-agency team to investigate the 500 Indians, who were named in the Panama Paper.

    The team comprising of experts on tax and foreign exchange transactions, will work with financial crime-fighting agencies to investigate ‘the flow of information in each one of the cases.’

    This revelation comes as part of a new data leak  from an anonymous source through German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung which was later shared globally by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). In India, one of the leading dailies, The Indian Express was a part of the investigation. Together the media groups have investigated a massive leak of 11.5 million documents from Mossack Fonseca, a Panama based law firm.    According to the records, the listed individuals who have paid the firm for a secretive, lax regulatory system that helped them to set up offshore entities in tax havens around the world.

    ‘Amitabh Bachchan was appointed director in at least four offshore shipping companies set up in 1993. Similarly, Aishwarya Rai and her family members were registered in 2005 as directors of Amic Partners Limited. Her status was later changed to share holder before the company was dissolved in 2008. DLF promoters KP Singh acquired a company registered in British Virgin Islands in 2010. His family’s three offshore entities hold almost $10 million,’ the report further stated.

    While owning offshore funds by itself isn’t illegal, as per the Reserve Bank of India guidelines, citizens were not allowed to possess an overseas entity before 2003. The central bank allowed individuals to remit funds of up to $25,000 a year under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) a year later I 2004.

    In 2013, individuals were allowed to set up subsidiaries or invest in joint ventures abroad under the Overseas Direct Investment window. But the newspaper’s investigation claims that most of the offshore accounts set up by Indians identified in the list were done before 2013, which could render them illegal.

    Not just individuals, a close scrutiny of The Panama Papers also reveals details of hitherto unknown deals, in some cases involving the government, too,” Indian Express further revealed in its investigative report.

    Note: The information in this report has been sourced from The Indian Express, The Times of India, The Wire, and NDTV

     

  • Kolkata firm picks up 12.5% stake in BAG Films

    Kolkata firm picks up 12.5% stake in BAG Films

    MUMBAI: B.A.G Films is diluting 12.55 per cent on an expanded equity to Kolkata-based High Growth Distributors (P) Ltd. for Rs 261 million.

    The production house will be making a preferential allotment of 13.07 million shares at a price of Rs 20 per share. “We have expansion plans and the funds will be utilised for this,” says B.A.G Films managing director Anuradha Prasad.
    Earlier India Bulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut acquired 25 per cent stake in B.A.G Films for Rs 262 million. On the expanded equity, Gehlaut’s holding will drop to 19 per cent.

    The promoters will have 38.39 per cent after the dilution, Prasad adds. Gehlaut’s open offer at Rs 13 per share for a further 20 per cent stake (as per regulatory requirement) would find no taker as the share price of B.A.G Films has jumped to Rs 23.

    Meanwhile, the company has decided to increase its authorised share capital from 100 million t0 125 million equity shares of Rs 2 each. The board has also given an in-principle approval to change the name of the company to B.A.G. Media Ltd or any variant thereof, subject to approvals.

    In the FM radio business run through subsidiary company B.A.G Infotainment, IDBI Bank has picked up a 10 per cent stake. The deal with Bank of Baroda for a similar stake did not conclude, says Prasad.

  • India Bulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut to buy 25 per cent in B.A.G Films

    India Bulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut to buy 25 per cent in B.A.G Films

    MUMBAI: India Bulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut is showing interest in the media business. The Delhi-based entrepreneur is buying around 25 per cent stake in TV content company B.A.G Films for Rs 262 million.

    The acquisition is through a preferential allotment of up to 20,250,000 equity shares of Rs 2 each at a price of Rs 13 per share. Gehlaut will have to make an open offer for a further 20 per cent stake which if subscribed totally, would make him the largest shareholder in the company.

    The promoters of B.A.G Films will hold around 37.5 per cent on the expanded equity. But their stake will go up after conversion as they are being issued preferential allotment of up to 10,000,000 warrants. The conversion price is fixed at Rs 13 per warrant. Gehlaut’s shareholding will also see change after the conversion.

    “Gehlaut has come in as a pure financial investor. We will be using the funds to meet our expansion plans,” says B.A.G Films managing director Anuradha Prasad.

    B.A.G Films will be investing Rs 160 million in new media and the animation business. “Besides, we will be retiring a part of our debt to Yes Bank,” says Prasad.

    B.A.G Films’ radio venture, run through a subsidiary company B.A.G Infotainment, has an investment outlay of Rs 480 million including the licence fee paid for 10 stations. B.A.G Infotainment rcently roped in IDBI Bank and Bank of Baroda for picking up 10 per cent each.

    B.A.G Films will also be issuing stock options of up to 10,000,000 equity shares to its permanent employees at Rs13 per equity share.

    The scrip touched a high of Rs 15.68 on Monday after opening at Rs 13.40. “The price of the scrip will stay firm and may see one more surge before steadying,” says an analyst in a broking firm.