Business Standard

Sebi charges Reliance with fraud

RIL barred from the futures and options market for a year

- SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Friday directed Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) to disgorge ~447.27 crore, made “unlawfully” by dealing in shares of its erstwhile subsidiary, Reliance Petroleum (RPL).

The markets regulator also barred RIL from the futures and options (F&O) segment for a year and asked it to settle all existing open positions. It will also have to pay 12 per cent interest on the disgorgeme­nt amount since November 29, 2007.

“Taking into considerat­ion the magnitude of the fraud across the markets, the quantum of unlawful gains made by the Noticee No. 1 (RIL) and the role of the agents in facilitati­ng the fraudulent design, I am inclined to pass certain directions against the noticees in order to protect the interest of the investors and reinstill their faith in the regulatory system,” said G Mahalingam, wholetime member, Sebi, in a 54-page order. The company has been charged under Sebi’s Prohibitio­n of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices (FUTP) Regulation­s.

Reliance responded by saying Sebi appeared to have misconstru­ed the true nature of the transactio­ns and imposed unjustifia­ble sanctions. “We are in the process of consulting our legal advisors. We propose to prefer an appeal and challenge the order in the Securities Appellate Tribunal,” it said.

It was confident, it said, of justifying the veracity of the transactio­ns and vindicatin­g its stand. “We have full confidence in the judicial process and propose to vigorously exercise all options available to us, to challenge the untenable findings in the order,” went the statement.

The order against RIL and 12 other entities is the first big order by Sebi under the chairmansh­ip of Ajay Tyagi.

It is not clear whether the interest would be charged at a simple or compound rate of 12 per cent. If it is simple interest, the total disgorgeme­nt would be ~948 crore and if it is compounded, it would be around ~1,250 crore.

The case dates back to 2007, when RIL and other related entities took short positions in the F&O segment in the RPL stock, at a time when a large block of shares in the company was to be sold in the cash segment. The share sale caused the stock price of RIL to dip in the cash and derivative­s segment, benefiting it by ~513 crore.

“Noticee No.1 (RIL) has made unlawful gains of ~513 crore, which could not have been made but for the fraudulent and manipulati­ve strategy/pattern adopted by them. I am inclined to direct disgorgeme­nt of the unlawful gains made,” the Sebi order said.

In its defence, RIL said the trades were done for hedging purchases. The company “adopted a prudent strategy to hedge the loss that it was expecting due to the impending sales in the cash segment by taking appropriat­e positions in the F&O segment,” the company had told Sebi.

The regulator, however, didn’t buy into RIL’s defence. “Noticee No 1, armed with the knowledge of its impending large sale in the cash market, undertook the short positions in the futures of RPL to the extent of 99.2 million shares, in an attempt to earn undue extra profit out of the same. Despite the nature of transactio­ns, such a strategy cannot be considered to be a hedging strategy,” Mahalingam said in the order.

An analysis by Sebi showed entities connected to RIL accounted for 93.63 per cent of Open Interest (unsquared positions) in the November 2007 futures contract of RIL and 40.13 per cent of these across all derivative­s contracts in RPL.

 ??  ?? SEBI ASKS COMPANY TO PAY ~447 CRORE PLUS 12% INTEREST IN INSIDER TRADING CASE; RELIANCE TO CHALLENGE ORDER AT SECURITIES APPELLATE TRIBUNAL
SEBI ASKS COMPANY TO PAY ~447 CRORE PLUS 12% INTEREST IN INSIDER TRADING CASE; RELIANCE TO CHALLENGE ORDER AT SECURITIES APPELLATE TRIBUNAL

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