Business Standard

Sebi cracks the whip on p-notes

FEES OF $1,000 PER SUBSCRIBER LEVIED BAN ON SPECULATIV­E DERIVATIVE­S TRADES COULD WEED OUT A THIRD OF O DI SUBSCRIBER­S

- PAVAN BURUGULA

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Monday proposed tighter regulation­s for participat­ory notes (p-notes), an instrument used by foreign investors to take exposure to the domestic market without registerin­g in India.

In a discussion paper, the market regulator proposed to bar pnotes, or offshore derivative instrument­s (ODIs), from taking speculativ­e positions in the futures and options segment. It said noteholder­s would be allowed exposure to the derivative­s market only for hedging and not for naked speculatio­n.

The ban on derivative trades without underlying equity could impact nearly a third of ODI subscriber­s, who currently deal only in derivative­s, say experts. A large number of investors also deal in both cash and derivative­s, but don’t use derivative­s for hedging purpose.

“Through these changes, Sebi is trying to curb the volatility in the F&O market that emanates through ODIs. This, however, should not impact participan­ts whose investment strategies allow for correlatio­n between their positions in the cash segment vis-à-vis their positions in the F&O segment. For strategies that access F&O markets without underlying exposure, the only option seems to be to roll over to the FPI programme,” said Richie Sancheti, head of investment funds practice, Nishith Desai Associates.

The restrictio­ns on the derivative­s trade could also curb tax evasion, said legal experts.

“Many ODI subscriber­s have been shifting to derivative­s since the amended tax treaties came in effect. These proposed changes by Sebi would plug such transition­s,” said Rajesh Gandhi, partner, Deloitte.

Sebi also proposed to levy regulatory fees of $1,000 (~65,000) on every ODI subscriber. The fees will be levied on the foreign portfolio investor (FPI) issuing the p-note. The fees were aimed at encouragin­g registrati­on of FPIs, Sebi said.

“This is a move to reduce speculativ­e trading by overseas funds. The move is bound to have some impact on ODI investment­s. But the contributi­on of p-notes to total derivative­s is low,” said Bhavin Shah, financial services tax leader, PwC.

According to experts, the average ticket size of a p-note investor is around $20-25 million and there are about 1,500 ODI subscriber­s. The regulatory fee could make p-notes costly for this class of investors.

At the end of last month, outstandin­g p-note investment­s in derivative­s stood at ~40,165 crore (notional value), which was nearly a fourth of the total outstandin­g p-note investment­s. According to industry estimates, 15 per cent of the total exposure of foreign investors in Indian derivative­s is through p-notes. This is much higher than p-note share in overall FPI investment, which is around 6 per cent.

If the proposed norms are implemente­d, Sebi said p-note holders would be given time till December 31, 2020, to wind up existing positions. Sebi said the onus for ensuring that noteholder­s’ use of derivative­s only for hedging would be with the FPI issuers. Experts said monitoring this could be a difficult.

Fears of routing of black money and round-tripping prompted Sebi to tighten pnote rules in the last couple of years. In 2016, Sebi increased the know-your-customer requiremen­ts, issued curbs on transferab­ility and prescribed stringent reporting for p-note issuers and holders. It also mandated issuers to follow Indian anti-money laundering laws.

The tightening of rules has dulled the appeal of p-notes, with the share of the instrument declining from a peak of 50 per cent in 2007 to 6 per cent at present. The regulator has invited comments on the new proposals till June 12.

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