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Scandal-Hit Indian Lender Uncovers Fresh $555 Million Bank Fraud

The new case relates to the non-performing assets of insolvent Indian firm Bhushan Power & Steel Ltd., PNB said.

Scandal-Hit Indian Lender Uncovers Fresh $555 Million Bank Fraud
Pedestrians walk past a branch of Punjab National Bank in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s beleaguered state-run lender Punjab National Bank disclosed another incident of fraud amounting to 38 billion rupees ($555 million), roughly one year after it suffered through the country’s costliest banking scandal.

The new case relates to the non-performing assets of insolvent Indian firm Bhushan Power & Steel Ltd., PNB said in a filing on Saturday. It reported the fraud to the Reserve Bank of India and made provisions worth 19.3 billion rupees.

PNB said Bhushan misappropriated bank funds and manipulated account books to raise money from consortium lender banks. A vast majority of the fraud took place at PNB’s Chandigarh branch, and also involved offices in Hong Kong and Dubai. The bank said it expects a "good recovery" from the insolvency case, which is currently before the National Company Law Tribunal.

The announcement is a fresh blow to PNB, which uncovered India’s biggest-ever bank fraud last year. That nearly $2 billion scandal was allegedly perpetrated by jeweler-to-the-stars Nirav Modi, who was arrested by U.K. police at the request of Indian authorities and is embroiled in an extradition process. Modi denies wrongdoing.

The sheer size of the fraud at the bank, as well as the jeweler’s presence in a large delegation at a Davos photo opportunity alongside Prime Minister Narendra Modi, fueled accusations that the ruling party took a lax approach to the country’s globe-trotting industrialists. Modi’s party, which won an even bigger parliamentary majority in May, denied those claims.

To contact the reporters on this story: Iain Marlow in New Delhi at imarlow1@bloomberg.net;Suvashree Ghosh in Mumbai at sghosh186@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shamim Adam at sadam2@bloomberg.net, Matthew Brockett

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