The money in these accounts could run into thousands of crores, sources in the department said. Certain preliminary checks have revealed undisclosed transactions and accounts that have not been disclosed, have been used to hide black money, a tax department source said. The accounts were frozen by the two depositories, National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL) and Central Securities Depository Services Ltd (CDSL), on January 1, 2007.
This move came after lakhs of investors failed to comply with the government’s directive to furnish details of their Permanent Account Number (PAN) while transacting in the financial markets.
“We have received a list of suspicious accounts and investigation (into those) will start,” the source said.
Tax department sources said that with the help of the unique PAN numbers they have been able to track down shareholders who are not running their accounts. In certain cases the account-holder may have died, and some may have changed addresses and did not inform the department, a source said.
Even after the accounts were frozen, some investors are receiving money in the form of allotment of shares in IPOs and certain other ways, they said. According to the data available on December 15, about one lakh accounts with cash balances in them are with CDSL while about 5.5 lakh such accounts are with NSDL.
While there were 2.6 lakh such accounts with CDSL on December 31, 2006, with NSDL it was 18 lakh. The government made quoting PAN mandatory with effect from April 1, 2006, and, with the help of the two depositories, started freezing non-PAN accounts beginning Jan 1, 2007. Securities in the frozen accounts consist mostly of shares from primary and secondary markets.
[Source: The Financial Express]