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Banking

What is a Bank fraud?

25 Aug 2025 Zinkpot 589
What is a Bank fraud?

CONTEXT

 

Banks like Bank of India, SBI and Canara Bank have classified the loan accounts of Reliance Communications (RCom) and it’s promoter Anil Ambani as fraud for a ₹3,000 crore loan fraud case involving SBI.

 

The fraud tag blacklists them across the banking system, severely restricting future borrowing and inviting further legal scrutiny. It could lead to asset seizures, penalties, or imprisonment if criminal charges are upheld.

 

But when does a Bank classify a borrower as a fraud?

 

A bank imposes a "fraud tag" on a loan defaulter not merely for defaulting on payments, but when there is evidence of intentional fraudulent activities or malpractices that violate laws or banking norms.  This is distinct from a simple default (failure to repay) or even a "wilful default", where the borrower has the ability to pay but chooses not to.

 

Fraud classification typically involves criminal intent, such as cheating, forgery, or misappropriation, and is governed by regulatory frameworks like those from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in India, where this terminology is commonly used.

 

Key terms

 

  1. NPAs: Occurs when a borrower misses payments (e.g., after 90 days for most loans under RBI norms, the account becomes a Non-Performing Asset or NPA). No fraud tag is applied here unless further issues arise.
  2. Wilful Default: A step up from default, where the borrower has the capacity to repay but diverts funds, siphons money, disposes of secured assets without permission, or fails to infuse committed equity. This is a civil issue but can overlap with fraud if criminal elements are present.
  3. Fraud: Fraud is considered more severe, often triggering criminal investigations. Involves deceitful acts, classified under categories like misappropriation, criminal breach of trust, cheating, forgery, or using counterfeit instruments (aligned with Indian Penal Code sections). For loans, common triggers include diversion of funds (using loan money for unauthorized purposes) or siphoning (transferring funds out to evade repayment), even without outright theft.

 

Fraud tags are not automatic; they require evidence from audits, early warning signals (EWS), or investigations, and banks must follow due process to avoid legal challenges.

 

Criteria for Imposing a Fraud Tag

Banks classify an account as fraud when:There is evidence of intentional wrongdoing, such as:

  1. Diversion of funds (e.g., using loan proceeds for personal gain or unrelated businesses instead of the stated purpose).
  2. Siphoning of funds (e.g., routing money to related parties or offshore entities to avoid repayment).
  3. Forgery of documents, false representations, or manipulation of financial statements.
  4. Other acts like creating fake entities or using counterfeit securities.
  5. The default is linked to these malpractices, not just economic hardship or business failure.

 

A fraud tag damages reputation, blocks future credit, triggers criminal probes, and may lead to asset seizures or arrests (if fraud is proven in court). It affects the entire group of companies/promoters.

Is the removal of the fraud tag possible? It is possible if the borrower repays fully, settles via compromise (with full payment within 3 months), or wins a legal challenge. For wilful defaults (related), the tag lifts if dues are cleared or the outstanding drops below ₹25 lakh.  Fraud tags are harder to remove without disproving the allegations.

 

 

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