Dewan Housing Finance Shares Fall Over Media Report

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Shares of home loan provider Dewan Housing Finance Corp fell 8 per cent on TuesdayShares of home loan provider Dewan Housing Finance Corp
fell 8 per cent on Tuesday following a media report that alleged financial misappropriation by the controlling shareholders of the
company.Dewan Housing, one of the country's largest housing finance companies, said the Cobrapost website's report "appears to have been
done with a mala fide intent to cause damage to the goodwill and reputation" and "resulting in erosion in shareholder value."Cobrapost did
not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on the Dewan statement.In its online report, Cobrapost said publicly available data
showed funds, including a large amount secured from state-run banks, was diverted to shell companies in India and abroad to buy
assets.Cobrapost alleged that through the shell companies, money the company borrowed from the banks ended up with other entities controlled
by the Wadhawans
Cobrapost alleged that this amounts to a criminal offence under the Indian penal code.The website, which is best known for sting operations
on businessmen, politicians and media houses, also said that the Wadhawans broke several laws governing companies.The Wadhawan group did not
immediately respond to an email and calls seeking comment.The capital markets regulator did not immediately respond to a request seeking
comment
The finance ministry declined to comment.Bank of Baroda said on Tuesday it had an exposure of Rs 4,000 crore to Dewan Housing and said it
would have to look into the veracity of the allegations against company.Shares of Dewan Housing fell by as much as 12.3 per cent to hit a
low of Rs 162.20 before recovering somewhat to close at Rs 169.70, their lowest level in almost three years
About 43.6 million shares - 4.8 times its 30-day average trading volume - changed hands during a day of volatile trading.A string of
defaults at one non-banking lender, Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Service (ILFS), triggered sharp falls in the stock and debt markets
last autumn amid fears of contagion spreading to the rest of the financial sector.The shadow banking sector comprises around 11,400 firms
with a combined balance-sheet worth more than Rs 22 lakh crore ($309.31 billion)
The formal banking sector is almost four times as big, according to the country's central bank.