September
04, 2000
Net
frauds and e-mail
A 23-year-old who made a mega profit by putting out a fake press release
which caused the shares of Emulex, a US fibre optic company, to drop
from $103 to $45 in just 15 minutes, was caught last week. How far are
we from becoming victims of similar fraud? Not very far. e-mail is a
dangerous territory. As long as the information is cross checked, unknown
e-mailers are often an excellent source of information for journalists.
One obviously tends to be careful about e-mail with nonsense words as
identities, but fraudsters are more likely to use well-known names to
appear more authentic. A few months ago I used to receive information
about a steel company from someone registered as bimaljalan.
Last week, there was an e-mail to several newspapers in the name of
samirarora. Since the high profile fund manager lives in
Singapore, it even had a Yahoo Singapore ID. Luckily for Arora and the
newspapers, the garbled language and the insipid comments on an article
in a business magazine made it obvious that it was a fake. But fraudsters
are bound to get smarter and it is only a matter of time before some
publication is duped. Unfortunately, fear of fraud may lead us to ignore
some genuine tips and end up the losers twice over.
Absurd
protection
Liberalisation may have thrown open several industries to competition,
but some absurd relics in the form of protectionist acts and government
orders remain in place. One such, is the Jute Packaging Materials (compulsory
use in Packaging Commodities) Act, 1987 aimed at protecting the dying
industry. Under a textile Ministry order of July 1999, food grains and
sugar have to be compulsorily packaged in Jute material. Under other
orders fertilisers (urea), cement etc. had to be packed in jute bags.
A Gujarat based consumer body has pointed out that in the recent havoc
caused by rains, water seeped into godowns and destroyed huge quantities
of sugar and food stocks. For a State which was recently reeling under
drought conditions such unnecessary damage is a criminal waste of food
and money. In fact, the absurdity of using porous material which cannot
protect the contents from rats, pests and spoilage due to moisture is
obvious, but the usage of jute is compulsory. The same was the case
with packing cement. It remains to be seen if the government reacts
sensibly and repeals the Act.
Innovision flaws
Getting carried away with computerised graphic manipulation can sometimes
be tricky. McCann Advertising, which created BPLs advertisement
proclaiming 400,000 mobile subscribers clearly does not expect readers
to pour over it visuals, but they do. One reader with a penchant for
such details called in to point out that the huge crowd of happy subscribers
portrayed by the ad is not so vast after all. In fact, careful observation
shows that the agency has simple created a collage out of a few frames
of the same crowd so that each character appears around six times in
the picture. But our reader has an interesting question. She says, I
hope BPL is not using the same method of compiling its subscriber number
as it is in creating its advertising graphic.
Selective haste?
SEBI seems to be slipping up. Three weeks in a row, the Securities Appellate
Tribunal has set aside its orders. One case pertains to the June 1998
payment crisis which the BSE hushed up by scandalously opening the trading
system in the dead of night to permit an officially sanctioned manipulation
of the system by logging in select trades at above market prices. D.A.Gadgil,
former MD of Sriram Mutual Fund had been barred from holding public
office for three years for bailing out speculators in Videocon and causing
a loss to its unit holders.
Following
an appeal filed by Gadgil the SAT has remanded the matter back to SEBI
for failing to follow procedure and has asked it to give him a fair
and reasonable hearing. Interestingly, there were three companies whose
shares were rigged up by Harshad Mehta and his cronies in 1998
BPL, Videocon and Sterlite. Neither the companies, nor Harshad Mehta
or his pal the then BSE vice president Rajendra Bhantia have yet been
penalised, ostensibly because the investigation procedure is a painstakingly
slow process. It is curious how SEBI acted in such haste against Gadgil
that it even slipped up procedure.
Updated
weekly.
The
author's e-mail address is: suchetadalal@yahoo.com
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