JPMorgan, Goldman shortlisted for Satyam: sources
By Narayanan Somasundaram
MUMBAI (Reuters) - JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs are among the banks shortlisted to advise the new board of Satyam Computer Services as it tries to save the fraud-stricken Indian outsourcing firm, three banking sources said on Wednesday.
The new six-member board appointed by the government to contain the fallout of country's largest corporate scandal will consider appointing an investment banker at a board meeting on Thursday, Deepak Parekh, a board member said on Wednesday.
"Discussions are on at the moment. It is just too complicated a deal and early to say if we have the mandate. But we are talking," a senior banker at one of the banks said.
He declined to be named and did not want his firm's identity disclosed as he is not authorized to speak to the media.
Spokesmen at the Indian offices of JPMorgan and Goldman could not be immediately reached for comment.
The Satyam restructuring mandate would be a high-profile and potentially lucrative role for the appointed investment bank, which would be responsible for helping to keep the company afloat and for keeping investors from losing everything.
Restructurings can take many shapes, from selling off to liquidating assets, to bringing in new investors.
Satyam, India's no.4 outsourcer, has been battling for survival since its founder Ramalinga Raju resigned as chairman earlier in January, revealing profits had been falsified for years and $1 billion of cash in the books did not exist. Continued...
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