Hyderabad: The Election Commission of India on Thursday uploaded two sets of  documents shared to it by the State Bank of India revealing the purchase and  encashment of electoral bonds between April 12, 2019 and January 11, 2024.        One document reveals the  purchase of electoral bonds by companies and another reveals encashment of  those bonds by political parties.         According to these  documents, there were 18,871 transactions of purchase worth over Rs 12,155.51  crore (Rs 1,21,55,51,32,000) made by companies during this period, while 20,422  transactions worth Rs 12,769.08 crore (Rs 1,27,69,08,93,000) were recorded  against political parties towards encashment.        However, the State Bank  of India  through its counsel informed the Supreme Court, during the hearing of its  petition seeking more time to comply with the court’s February 15 order, that  “a total of 22,217 bonds were purchased between 12 April 2019 to 15 February  2024.”        The SBI further informed  the Supreme Court that the purchase and encashment “would cumulatively add up  to 44,434 data sets since there are two silos of information.”        However, the purchase  document that the Election Commission of India uploaded on its website shows  18,871 transactions of purchase of electoral bonds as against the 22,217 that  the SBI counsel submitted to the Supreme Court on March 11, 2024. The document  shows 3,346 transactions less than the number submitted to the Supreme Court by  the SBI.          Cumulatively, the total  number of transactions for purchase and encashment, according to two documents  uploaded by the ECI, is 39,293 as against 44,434 as informed by the SBI to the  Supreme Court.         Denomination-wise  break-up         According to the SBI  disclosure, the electoral bond worth Rs 1 crore appears to be the most  favourite of political donors. During the period between April 12, 2019 and  January 11, 2024, SBI sold 11,671 bonds of Rs 1 crore each, 4,620 bonds of Rs  10 lakh each, 2,228 bonds of Rs 1 lakh each, 220 bonds of Rs 10,000 each and  132 bonds of Rs 1,000 each.        Company-wise break-up         An analysis of the SBI  disclosure revealed that 1,258 entities, which include both corporates as well  as individuals, have donated around Rs 12,100 crore to political parties. Of  these, 21 companies donated more than Rs 100 crore.         The highest donor is  Future Gaming and Hotel Services with Rs 1308 crore, followed by  Megha  Engineering and Infrastructures Rs 966 crore, Qwik Supply Chain 410, Vedanta  400.65 crore, Haldia Energy 377 crore, Essel Mining and Industries 224.50  crore, Western UP Power Transmission Company Rs 220 crore, Bharti Airtel Rs 198  crore, Keventer Foodpark Infra Rs 195 crore, MKJ Enterprises Rs 192.42 crore,  Madanlal Ltd Rs 185.50 crore, Yashoda Super Speciality Hospital Rs 162 crore,  Utkal Alumina International Rs 145.30 crore, DLF Commercial Developers Rs 130  crore, Jindal Steel and Power Rs 123 crore B G Shirke Construction Technology  Rs 117 crore Dhariwal Infrastructure Rs 115 crore Birla Carbon India  Rs  105 crore Chennai Green Woods Rs 105 crore Rungta Sons Rs 100 crore.
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