The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) has begun reviewing the financial statements of IndusInd Bank and Gensol Engineering and expects the process to take at least six months before any action is taken against auditors for alleged lapses.ICAI president Charanjot Singh Nanda said the review is being handled by the Financial Reporting Review Board (FRRB), which will examine financial records of IndusInd Bank for 2023–24 and 2024–25, and those of Gensol Engineering and BluSmart Mobility for 2023–24.“FRRB will take at least six months or more to come to a conclusion on what is happening. It is a long-drawn process,” Nanda said, as quoted PTI.If the board finds that the books were not presented in a true and fair manner, the case will be referred to ICAI’s disciplinary committee.The move comes after IndusInd Bank in March disclosed a Rs 1,979 crore accounting lapse in its derivatives portfolio. The bank also reported Rs 674 crore wrongly booked as microfinance interest income and Rs 595 crore in unsubstantiated balances under ‘other assets’.Gensol Engineering, meanwhile, is under regulatory scanner after Sebi barred its promoters Anmol Singh Jaggi and Puneet Singh Jaggi from the securities market for governance violations. BluSmart Mobility, which is also promoted by Anmol Jaggi, is part of the same audit review cycle.Separately, ICAI announced a summit series titled “From Ledger to Global Leadership” to highlight the role of Indian chartered accountants in the Global Capability Centres (GCC) ecosystem. The first edition will be held in New Delhi on June 27–28, 2025, followed by regional events in GIFT City, Mumbai, and Hyderabad.ICAI said the initiative is supported by government bodies including the Ministry of External Affairs, Ministry of Electronics and IT, IFSCA, SEPC, Invest India, NSDC, and IIM Sambalpur.“With more than 1,800 GCCs operating in India and employing over 1.9 million professionals, India is uniquely positioned to lead the next phase of GCC evolution,” Nanda said.ICAI has also set up a group under its Directorate of International Trade, Services and WTO to promote India as a global hub for finance-led GCCs and expand the role of CAs in areas such as finance, compliance, taxation, risk and analytics.
Trending
- HDB Financial IPO listing: Stock set for market debut on July 2; check GMP and other details
- Total sown area this monsoon: Kharif sowing jumps 11.3% on strong monsoon; rice and pulses lead acreage surge
- Leadership shuffle: Tata Sons ropes in consumer veterans to Tata Digital board; balances earlier finance-centric line-up
- June GST collections 2025: Tax mop-up at Rs 1.85 lakh crore, up 6.2% on YoY
- Sensex zooms 12,000 points in just 3 months! Is the Rs 72 lakh crore stock market rally sustainable? Here’s what investors should focus on
- ‘Make in India’ success: Chinese smartphone brands bet on India for manufacturing & exports; Indian phonemakers compete for assembly
- ITR filing FY 2024-25: Why filing Income Tax Return is important even if you have no tax to pay – explained
- Indian Railways launches new ‘super app’ RailOne: Book IRCTC train tickets, track PNR, food, rail enquiry in one place – what it means for passengers
- Raymond Realty listing: Shares open below discovered price; brokerages still bullish on long-term prospects
- PM Modi’s visit to Namibia: Focus likely on diamonds, critical minerals; uranium talks also on agenda