Mehta

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The Loophole:

‘Govt. Securities’ had to be bought and sold in order to make the loans circulating. For this, they
used brokers like Harshad Mehta to find a seller of securities or find a buyer for their securities.
The payment however which had to be made bank-to-bank started being made in the name of the
broker i.e. Harshad Mehta.

This led to the following:

• The settlement process in the government securities market became broker


intermediated, that is, delivery and payments started getting routed through a broker instead of
being made directly between the transacting banks. (This was against the RBI guidelines)

• The broker through whom the payment passed on its way from one bank to another found a
way of crediting the money into his account though the account payee cheque was drawn in
favour of a bank.

• While the above two steps transformed an RF deal from a loan to a bank into a loan to a broker,
it would still be a secured loan. However, the brokers soon found a way of persuading the
lending bank to dispense with security for the loan or to accept worthless security.

How did Harshad Mehta take advantage of this loophole?

Let’s say for example there are three banks A B and C. If bank A wanted to sell the government
Securities, Harshad Mehta would act as a broker which means he would promise to find a buyer
for bank A’s securities. For this, he would ask for some time from Bank A to find a buyer. Now
if Bank B wanted to purchase securities, he would take the cheque in his name (against the RBI
guidelines) and again as for time from Bank B to find a seller.

This means he would keep the security of bank A and the cheque from Bank B with him for
some time. Harshad used this money he received from bank B to pump money into the stock
market. Now after some time when bank A asked for the money in exchange for their security,
he would take another cheque from Bank C which wanted to purchase Securities and pay bank
A. This way Harshad created a dangerous chain of taking payment from another bank to make
payments for the securities he promised to sell. Meanwhile, he kept putting more and more
money into the stock market from the cheques that were with him from other banks. He would
make deals in such a way that there would always be enough money with him to trade in the
stock market.

1. Bank Receipts

In an RF deal, as we have discussed it so far, the borrowing bank delivers the actual securities to
the lender and takes them back on repayment of the loan. In practice, however, this is not usually
done. Instead, the borrower gives a Bank Receipt (BR) which serves three functions:

● The BR confirms the sale of securities.


● It acts as a receipt for the money received by the selling bank. Hence the name -
bank receipt.
● It promises to deliver the securities to the buyer. It also states that in the
meantime the seller holds the securities in trust for the buyer.

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