Business Standard

SEBI APPOINTS ENQUIRY OFFICER TO VET DELOITTE’S NSE REPORT

Move could be the precursor to final order

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Mumbai, 23 May

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has appointed an enquiry officer to examine the forensic audit conducted by Deloitte India, a thirdparty auditor, on the National Stock Exchange’s (NSE’s) co-location facility. The appointmen­t could be a precursor to passing a final order in the matter.

According to sources, the officer has been tasked with corroborat­ing the Deloitte findings with the Sebi’s internal data. The regulator wants to ensure the system audit by Deloitte was in line with the directions given by the Sebi’s internal panel set up initially, a source said. Sources said the officer would also ascertain the exact volumes clocked when the NSE used the so-called unicast architectu­re at its co-location facility, which was later found to be prone to manipulati­on.

Further, the officer will also crosscheck the claim by the forensic auditor that there was no malafide or monetary benefit by any exchange official.

Deloitte, appointed by the NSE to conduct a forensic audit following the Sebi directive, in its report, had said the stock exchange’s systems were prone to manipulati­on. The report, however, has not found any individual involvemen­t or human fault, as flagged by the Sebi’s technical advisory committee (TAC).

An NSE spokespers­on said that since the matter was between the exchange and the regulator, the exchange would not be able to comment.

People privy to the Sebi's workings said an enquiry officer is appointed only in matters that need critical examinatio­n. The enquiry officer is expected to undertake inspection of investigat­ion reports, documents and books of account. Later, the officer would submit the findings to the whole-time member and the Sebi board. It couldn’t be ascertaine­d if the enquiry officer had been given any deadline to submit the findings. A final order in this longpendin­g matter is critical, as the issue has delayed the exchange’s mega initial public offering (IPO). Sebi Chairman Ajay Tyagi in April had said approval for the NSE’s IPO might have to wait till the co-location issue was addressed.

Last year, the finance ministry had questioned the market regulator over its move to direct the NSE to conduct a forensic audit on itself. The ministry had asked the Sebi to explain the rationale behind advising the NSE to conduct a forensic probe on the lapses, rather than conducting it through its own expert committee.

Sebi's TAC had submitted its findings in March last year to the regulator. In its report, the TAC had said some traders on the exchange had unfair access to market data and trading systems. The panel had recommende­d immediate action for lapses on the part of the NSE and the exploitati­on made by OPG Securities, a brokerage firm, under its guidance.

The Sebi began probing the matter in early 2015, after it received at least three complaints, which alleged certain brokers colluded with the NSE’s employees or outsourced staff to obtain informatio­n regarding loading and starting of servers, including the backup server.

According to the Sebi, the complainan­t also alleged that the NSE's system enabled first-to-connect stockbroke­rs to receive data ahead of others. The said set-up was used for three years (2011-14). Later, the exchange moved to a new multi-cast system, under which data packets reached all participan­ts at the same time. The NSE also beefed up its surveillan­ce systems and worked closely with the Sebi to address all concerns pertaining to the controvers­y.

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