Business Standard

CO-LOCATION ISSUE COULD DELAY NSE EQUITY OFFER

Nod for ~10,000-cr IPO after Sebi addresses issue, says Tyagi

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY & SAMIE MODAK

The much-awaited initial public offering of equity (IPO) of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) could take time. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) said on Wednesday said that approval for it might have to wait till the co-location issue was addressed. “That (IPO) will take time. NSE itself wants the other issue of colocation to (first) get sorted,” said Ajay Tyagi, chairman of Sebi, while addressing the media after the market regulator's board meeting.

The country’s largest stock exchange had filed its offer document with Sebi in December 2016. The issue size is likely to be around ~10,000 crore, making it one of the largest IPOs in the domestic market. Typically, Sebi takes two to three months to clear an offer document.

The regulator is probing allegation­s of preferenti­al access at NSE’s co-location (colo) facility. According to an independen­t audit, trading systems at the facility were prone to manipulati­on, allowing certain brokers to access trading data before anybody else. The regulator is yet to decide the next course of action.

Asked about the case’s status, Tyagi said it would take “some time”.

As for the delay in appointing NSE’s managing director and chief executive officer (CEO), Tyagi said this would be done shortly. In February, the exchange proposed Vikram Limaye, MD & CEO of IDFC, to succeed Chitra Ramkrishna, who quit in December 2016. It has appointed J Ravichandr­an as interim MD & CEO. While the exchange’s shareholde­rs approved Limaye’s appointmen­t and remunerati­on in March, the regulator has not.

“We sought some additional informatio­n, which came to us three-four days ago. We will (now) decide very quickly,” said Tyagi.

Asked what the additional informatio­n was, Tyagi said there were two-three queries and since it was between Sebi and NSE, he would not like to comment further.

Sources said one of the queries could be on Limaye’s role in the Board of Control for Cricket in India. Limaye is on the Supreme Court-appointed four-member committee of administra­tors (COA) to run the affairs of the cricket body. The appointmen­t was on the recommenda­tion of the R M Lodha panel.

“Sebi has wanted some clarity over the dual role Limaye would play on the BCCI panel and as NSE chief. The regulator was apprehensi­ve on whether Limaye would be able to perform both duties simultaneo­usly,” said a source.

Sources added as Limaye’s appointmen­t on the COA was made by the apex court, it could be a lengthy process to recuse from that panel.

 ??  ?? The NSE had filed its offer document with Sebi in December 2016
The NSE had filed its offer document with Sebi in December 2016

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