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IndusInd Bank faces ₹2,000 crore accounting probe

SFIO investigates audit red flags; Mumbai Police finds no fund diversion

The Government of India has asked the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) to investigate IndusInd Bank after auditors flagged accounting irregularities worth nearly ₹2,000 crore. The discrepancies cover several years, from 2015–16 to 2023–24, and involve potential errors in financial reporting, internal controls, and accounting of certain loans and fees.

Internal and external audits showed issues in the bank’s derivatives business and microfinance operations, including misclassified revenue and incorrectly booked income. Some key figures include ₹674 crore wrongly recorded as microfinance income, ₹595 crore as unexplained assets, and ₹172.6 crore mislabelled as fee income.

The Mumbai Police Economic Offences Wing (EOW) has been conducting a preliminary inquiry since August after the bank itself reported the problem. Officials say the investigation has so far found no evidence of fund diversion, and statements have been recorded from several current and former employees.

SFIO’s probe will examine audit reports, RBI filings, and internal documents to check for account manipulation, misclassification, related-party transactions, or any misuse of funds. Former executives, including ex-CEO Sumant Kathpalia, former Deputy CEO Arun Khurana, and ex-CFO Govind Jain, have been questioned as part of the investigation.

IndusInd Bank has assured that it has enough capital to cover the impact of these accounting adjustments and is cooperating fully with authorities. The SFIO investigation reflects a wider scrutiny of governance and financial practices at one of India’s leading private banks.

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