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SEBI Directs Tata Motors To Probe Whatsapp Earnings Leak

After Axis Bank and HDFC Bank, Tata Motors comes under SEBI’s scanner for earnings leak.

Customer reaches for the door handle of a Tata Motors Ltd. car in a dealership in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Customer reaches for the door handle of a Tata Motors Ltd. car in a dealership in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Markets regulator SEBI has asked Tata Motors Ltd. to conduct an internal probe into the alleged leak of its financial earnings on the WhatsApp messaging platform ahead of the earnings being disclosed to the stock exchanges and shareholders.

Tata Motors’ earnings for the quarter ended December 2015 were finalised before the circulation of the WhatsApp message on Feb. 11, 2016, the Securities and Exchange Board of India said in an order on its website. The financial figures that the automaker reported during the quarter matched the figures that were in circulation prior to its official announcement, the regulator added.

The same could not have been possible without leakage of information from the person(s), who were privy to the information relating to financials prior to its official announcement
SEBI Order On Tata Motors
SEBI Directs Tata Motors To Probe Whatsapp Earnings Leak

Tata Motors is the third company that SEBI has named in its probe related to the leakage of financial earnings on WhatsApp. Earlier, it issued similar orders to private lenders Axis Bank Ltd. and HDFC Bank Ltd. Last year, a Reuters investigation had uncovered earnings leaks ahead of financial results on the instant messaging app and had identified at least 12 cases. SEBI conducted searches at the premises of more than 30 market analysts and dealers, seizing documents, computers, mobiles and laptops.

SEBI regulations bar any insider with “unpublished price-sensitive” information of a company or listed securities from communicating or providing it to any other person, including other insiders. Such information, according to the SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 2015, cannot be shared unless in the case of a legal obligation or if it is disclosed in order to perform duties. SEBI chairman Ajay Tyagi had earlier said that there were six or seven blue-chip companies whose earnings were circulated on WhatsApp closer to the actual results.

Along with the internal inquiry report, SEBI has asked Tata Motors to submit a report on the present systems and controls in place and how they can be strengthened. The regulator has ordered for such processes be strengthened to ensure that such leakages don’t happen again. It has also asked the company to mention the persons responsible for monitoring such systems.

The inquiry has to be wound up in three months, and Tata Motors will have to submit the report to SEBI within seven days of its completion.