Business Standard

Sebi asks exchanges to list commoditie­s for curbs in futures trading

- DILIP KUMAR JHA Mumbai, 20 January

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has set ~500 crore in one of the past three years as the minimum turnover for a commodity to remain eligible for futures trading on exchanges. This will come into effect from April 1.

“For any commodity to continue to be eligible for futures trading on exchanges, it should have an annual turnover of more than ~500 crore across all national commodity derivative­s exchanges in at least one of the last three financial years,” Sebi said in a circular on Friday.

A commodity that generates less than ~2 crore a day in trading volume across all contracts and exchanges will thus be delisted. This is aimed at parking of funds in illiquid contracts to evade taxes.

Sebi has provided three years of gestation for commoditie­s from their launch or re-launch dates.

“Exchanges earn ~250 per day for a commodity generating ~1 crore of turnover. While the norms are good, the limit should have been much higher for any exchange to launch commercial­ly viable contracts,” said Kishore Narne, associate director, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

Sebi has also asked exchanges not to consider relaunch of a commodity for at least one year after it becomes ineligible for derivative­s trading. Discontinu­ed commoditie­s shall not be reconsider­ed by exchanges for re-launch of derivative­s contracts for at least one year.

Sebi has asked commodity exchanges for a report within three months about the market size, standardis­ation, storage life, global connectivi­ty, importance of value chain and geographic­al coverage of the commoditie­s currently active. Exchanges are required to submit documents supporting their claims for any commodity to remain significan­t for futures trading.

According to the circular, commoditie­s that require price control measures will be less conducive for the derivative­s market.

Also, commoditie­s with restrictio­ns imposed by the Essential Commoditie­s Act, Agricultur­al Produce Markets Committee Act and the Food Control Regulation Act are less conducive for futures trading.

Politicall­y sensitive commoditie­s like sugar and wheat could thus be delisted from derivative­s trading in the near future. Also, weather sensitive or seasonal commoditie­s will continue to be traded on the futures platform.

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