The Satyam Computer Services scandal was India's largest corporate fraud until 2010. The founder and directors of India-based outsourcing company Satyam Computer Services, falsified the accounts, inflated the share price, and stole large sums from the company. Much of this was invested in property. The swindle was discovered in late 2008 when the Hyderabad property market collapsed, leaving a trail back to Satyam.[1] The scandal was brought to light in 2009 when chairman Byrraju Ramalinga Raju confessed that the company's accounts had been falsified.
History
For many years Satyam accounts showed profits that had never existed, cash at the bank that did not exist, which inflated the share price. Raju and friends then sold shares. The accounts also showed $3m of "salary payments" to people who did not exist. These in fact went to board members. The falsified accounts were used to obtain cheap loans in the USA which were stolen by Raju and never entered into the accounts. Much of the money was squandered in real estate deals in Hyderabad. When the property market collapsed in 2008, the money vanished and whistle-blowers began to be heard. A failed attempt by Raju to use Satyam to buy a property company led to the scandal being uncovered.[1]
Initial confession and investigation
On 7 January 2009, the chairman of Satyam, Byrraju Ramalinga Raju, resigned, confessing that he had manipulated the accounts of Rs 7,000 crore in several forms. The global corporate community was said to be shocked and scandalised.[2]
In February 2010, the CBI took over the case and filed three partial charge sheets (dated 7 April 2009, 24 November 2009, and 7 January 2010), over the course of the year.[2]
Acquisition of Satyam by Mahindra Group
On 13 April 2009, via a formal public auction process, a 31% stake in Satyam was purchased by Mahindra & Mahindra owned company Tech Mahindra, as part of its diversification strategy. Effective July 2009, Satyam rebranded its services under the new Mahindra management as "Mahindra Satyam". After a delay due to tax issues[28][29] Tech Mahindra announced its merger with Mahindra Satyam on 21 March 2012, after the board of two companies gave the approval.[30][31] The companies merged legally on 25 June 2013.[32][33]
In popular culture
On 31 December 2025, Netflix finally released the final, long-delayed episode of the docuseries Bad Boy Billionaires: India, focusing on the infamous Satyam scandal by B. Ramalinga Raju, after a five-year legal battle.[34][35][36]
See also
- Satyam Computer Services
- Tech Mahindra
- National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA)
- 1992 Indian stock market scam
- NSE co-location scam
External links
References
- Satyam scam: All you need to know about India's biggest accounting fraud Hindustan Times, 9 April 2015^
- Satyam Scandal: Who, what and when The Hindu, 9 April 2015^
- Satyam Founder Ramalinga Raju, 9 Others Convicted of Multi-Crore Accounting Fraud