A shareholder tip and Swiss audit gaps expose doubts over ₹15 lakh crore in reported turnover.
This Rajesh Exports case is fascinating because it highlights how headline numbers can mask deeper structural issues. Sebi’s probe essentially asks: are these revenues real, or are they accounting constructs without verifiable substance?
Here are the key takeaways:
How Sebi Uncovered the Gap
Shareholder complaint (2024): Triggered the investigation into unusually large trade receivables.
Revenue mismatch: Overseas subsidiaries (esp. Global Gold Refineries AG) reported revenues in the lakh-crore range. At the same time, Valcambi SA—the supposed operating hub—showed only a few hundred crores in standalone accounts.
Missing documentation: Customer lists, invoices, transaction trails, and ownership records were either incomplete or unavailable.
Forensic audit hurdles: Restricted access to systems, elusive vendor/customer details, and inability to independently verify transactions.
The Accounting Twist
Rajesh Exports argued that Valcambi’s standalone accounts only showed refining fees, while consolidated accounts included the gross value of gold transactions.
This distinction—service income vs. full transaction value—can inflate revenues massively.
Sebi’s concern: without proof of inventory ownership, customer contracts, or risk assumption, the reported numbers may not be credible.
Why It Matters
Transparency gap: Investors saw consolidated figures but had little visibility into overseas subsidiaries that generated 98%+ of revenue.
Systemic risk: As Indian companies expand globally, regulators face challenges verifying cross-border structures and accounting practices.
Historical parallel: The scale of alleged misrepresentation (₹15.15 lakh crore) makes this potentially as significant as the Satyam scandal (2009). However, the nature of the allegations differs—here it’s about unverifiable revenues, not missing cash.
What’s Next
Sebi’s findings are interim; Rajesh Exports will present its defence.
The case could evolve into:
An accounting dispute (technical treatment of revenues),
A governance failure (lack of transparency and oversight), or
Something larger, if evidence points to deliberate misrepresentation.
This controversy is a reminder that scale alone doesn’t equal credibility—especially when investors lack visibility into the businesses driving those numbers.

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