Fresh blow to Anil Ambani: ED attaches 132-acre DAKC land worth Rs 4,462 crore; Reliance says no impact on business
ET Online November 03, 2025 11:00 PM
Synopsis

Enforcement Directorate has attached over 132 acres of land at Dhirubhai Ambani Knowledge City in Navi Mumbai. The value of this attachment is ₹4,462.81 crore. This action brings the total attached assets in Reliance Group's alleged loan frauds to over ₹7,500 crore. The probe investigates alleged diversion of bank loans by Reliance Communications and other ADAG companies.

FILE PHOTO: Anil Ambani, chairman of the Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, attends the company's annual general meeting in Mumbai
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has attached over 132 acres of land within the Dhirubhai Ambani Knowledge City (DAKC) in Navi Mumbai, valued at ₹4,462.81 crore, sources in the know of the matter told ET. This marks a significant development in the bank fraud case against Anil Ambani’s Reliance Group.

According to people in the know, with this action, the total value of assets attached in connection with the Reliance Group’s alleged loan frauds has risen to over ₹7,500 crore.

The attachment, made by the Directorate of Enforcement’s Special Task Force, Headquarters, was carried out under the provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002, sources said. It follows an ongoing probe into alleged diversion and misuse of bank loans by Reliance Communications Ltd (RCom) and other Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (ADAG) companies.


Earlier, the ED had attached 42 properties worth over ₹3,083 crore in cases involving RCom, Reliance Commercial Finance Ltd, and Reliance Home Finance Ltd.

The investigation stems from a CBI FIR filed under Sections 120-B, 406, and 420 of the Indian Penal Code and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act against RCom, Anil Ambani, and others.

Reliance confirms ED attachment; says Anil Ambani not board member

Reliance Centre in Delhi (RCD) and Dhirubhai Ambani Knowledge City (DAKC) in Navi Mumbai are assets of Reliance Communications Ltd (RCom). The company has been undergoing the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) for more than six years. Matters related to its resolution are currently sub judice before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and the Supreme Court of India.

On Monday, Reliance Infrastructure Ltd issued a clarification stating that certain assets of the company had been provisionally attached by the ED for alleged violations under the PMLA.

“We wish to inform that certain assets of the Company have been provisionally attached by ED for the alleged violations under PMLA. There is no impact on the business operations, shareholders, employees or any other stakeholders of Reliance Infrastructure Limited. Mr. Anil D. Ambani is not on the Board of Reliance Infrastructure Limited for more than 3.5 years,” the company said in its statement.

Trouble mounts for Anil Ambani-led Reliance

According to ED, RCom and its group companies availed loans from domestic and foreign lenders between 2010 and 2012, amounting to ₹40,185 crore, of which five banks have declared the accounts as fraudulent.

The investigating agency’s probe has revealed that loans taken by one group entity from one bank were allegedly used to repay borrowings of other entities, transferred to related parties, or invested in mutual funds—actions that violated loan sanction conditions.

ED revealed that over ₹13,600 crore was diverted for “evergreening” of loans, ₹12,600 crore was transferred to connected parties, and ₹1,800 crore was parked in fixed deposits and mutual funds before being rerouted to group firms.

Also read: Anil Ambani's Reliance in ED storm; more than 40 properties worth ₹3,084 crore attached

It also uncovered extensive misuse of bill discounting facilities and outward remittances abroad to siphon off funds.

With the latest action, the cumulative value of properties attached in the Reliance Group’s bank fraud cases stands at ₹7,545 crore. Moreover, ED said it remains committed to pursuing financial crime perpetrators and recovering the proceeds of crime for rightful claimants.

Yes Bank–Reliance loan link under scanner

The ED’s probe has uncovered that between 2017 and 2019, Yes Bank invested ₹2,965 crore in RHFL and ₹2,045 crore in RCFL. By December 2019, these investments had turned bad, with ₹1,353.50 crore unpaid for RHFL and ₹1,984 crore for RCFL.

Investigators found that funds collected from the public through the former Reliance Nippon Mutual Fund were not supposed to be invested directly in Anil Ambani Group finance companies due to SEBI’s conflict-of-interest rules. To bypass this restriction, the money was allegedly routed indirectly via Yes Bank’s investments, which ultimately reached group firms.

The ED and CBI both found that funds were channeled through Yes Bank’s exposure to RHFL and RCFL, which then extended loans to entities linked to the Reliance Anil Ambani Group. These transactions are now part of ongoing money-laundering and corruption probes.

ED flags fund diversion and control failures

According to the ED, substantial amounts were diverted, lent to related companies, and siphoned off. Large corporate loans meant for business purposes were instead funneled into the accounts of group-linked entities.

The agency highlighted serious control lapses at the lending stage — loans were processed with unusual speed, sometimes with applications, approvals, and disbursals completed in a single day.

In several instances, money was released even before loans were formally sanctioned. Field inspections were skipped, documentation was incomplete or altered, and securities were inadequate or missing. The ED said these repeated and deliberate lapses pointed to “intentional control failures.”

A CBI chargesheet filed recently also alleged that former Yes Bank CEO Rana Kapoor and industrialist Anil Ambani were part of a conspiracy that caused losses exceeding ₹2,700 crore to the bank through irregular investments in Reliance Group firms.
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