Business Standard

Sebi clears own staff on MCX-SX licence THE STORY SO FAR

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N New Delhi, 19 April

An internal probe commission­ed by the markets regulator has cleared its staff of any wrongdoing in the grant of a licence to the MCX Stock Exchange (since renamed as Metropolit­an Stock Exchange).

The chief vigilance officer (CVO) of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) studied the process followed in the grant of licence. “The CVO has concluded there were no procedural lapses or wrongdoing. The report was taken on record at the February board meeting,” said a source.

The probe was initiated late last year by U K Sinha, the then regulator’s head. This was after the employees under a shadow had written to him, asking for closure on the issue. The entire hierarchy which dealt with the files in question were probed.

An e-mail to the Sebi spokespers­on last week for comments got no response.

The regulator's approval of MCX-SX was a long-drawn process, across the terms of three Sebi chairmen — M Damodaran, C B Bhave and Sinha. The first No Objection certificat­es for the promoter group’s stake purchase in the Delhi Stock Exchange and Vadodara Stock Exchange were issued in 2007, during Damodaran’s term. Licence for approval of a currency exchange was during Bhave’s term.

However, permission to operate a fullfledge­d stock exchange was denied, due to a controvers­y over compliance with shareholdi­ng norms. After a long legal battle till the apex court, Sebi under Sinha agreed to reconsider the applicatio­n, under amended norms. And, MCX-SX got the licence to operate a full-fledged stock exchange in late 2012. It commenced equities trading in February 2013. The National Spot Exchange crisis erupted later that year and the

2008:

MCX-SX gets approval to launch currency exchange

Gets conditiona­l extension requiring compliance with shareholdi­ng norms

Moves court after not getting permission to operate equities

Permission granted under amended norms

MCX-SX starts equities trading

CBI registers preliminar­y enquiry against several entities including Sebi officials alleging irregulari­ties

2009: 2010: 2012: 2013: 2014:

licence grant became the subject of a Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) probe.

Executive Director S V Murlidhar Rao, Deputy General Manager Rajesh Dangeti, Assistant GM Vishakha More and former executive director J N Gupta were among the officials CBI had indicted under the anti-corruption law for alleged lapses. The case was registered on the basis of a preliminar­y enquiry against C B Bhave, the officials mentioned above and others. This was despite CBI not finding any criminalit­y on the part of Bhave, while it recommende­d department­al action against wholetime member K M Abraham.

In September, CBI searched the houses of some of these officials. After this, the Sebi Employees Associatio­n (SEA) had written to Sinha for interventi­on to ensure an institutio­nal mechanism to respond to such inquiries by external investigat­ion agencies. SEA also called for an environmen­t where officers could discharge their duties without fear of selective scrutiny. A little over 70 Sebi officials have been called for questionin­g in several high-profile cases in recent years.

 ??  ?? The probe was initiated late last year by U K Sinha (pictured), the then Sebi chief
The probe was initiated late last year by U K Sinha (pictured), the then Sebi chief

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