Business Standard

Foreign investors seek Sebi relief on p-note ban

Ask for a 3-month extension to roll over their July positions; say curbs will kill the p-note market

- BLOOMBERG & SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 11 July

Foreign banks met with markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), to seek relief from a new rule that requires investors to liquidate some of their offshore derivative­s contracts, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Sebi on Friday issued a circular that said the derivative­s must be liquidated by the end of 2020 or by the instrument’s date of maturity, whichever was earlier. Banks, representi­ng their clients, met with Sebi officials on Monday to seek a three-month extension to roll over their July positions. The contracts usually have monthly maturity, meaning existing products will have to be rolled over by the end of this month or be liquidated upon expiration. Liquidatin­g all contracts at once will create huge volatility in stocks, the banks said, according to the people.

At issue are contracts known as participat­ory notes (p-notes), which foreign banks create for offshore investors looking to trade in India’s $2-trillion equity market without registerin­g onshore with Sebi. The regulator has been taking steps to cut down on the use of the so-called p-notes, culminatin­g in Friday’s announceme­nt. The banks told Sebi officials the rule would effectivel­y kill the p-notes market, said the people, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorised to speak on the subject.

“It remains to be seen what the full effects of this recent change will be on foreign funds, and if some funds choose to set up their own foreign portfolio investment accounts to trade directly, or exit the market altogether,” said Phillip Meyer, general counsel and chief operating officer of hedge fund firm Oasis Management (Hong Kong), which has traded in Indian securities for more than 15 years.

In a discussion paper floated last month, the markets regulator had proposed to bar p-notes from taking speculativ­e positions in the derivative­s market. Sebi had suggested that ODI (offshore derivative­s instrument­s) issuers be given time till December 31, 2020, to wind down any outstandin­g derivative­s exposure taken for a purpose other than hedging.

The markets regulator has said ODIissuing foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) will have to provide a certificat­e that fresh derivative­s positions are “only for hedging the equity shares on a one-to-one basis”.

“The ODI-issuing FPIs shall not be allowed to issue ODIs with derivative as underlying, with the exception of those… taken by the ODI-issuing FPI for hedging the equity shares held by it, on a one-to-one basis,” Sebi said in a circular last Friday.

Sebi will allow p-notes in single stocks for hedging cash positions of the same stocks, but it won’t allow hedging of index derivative­s even if there is an underlying cash position, according to the people. A Sebi spokespers­on didn’t respond to an email and a phone call seeking comment.

The regulator said at the meeting with foreign banks it wants hedge funds to register as direct foreign investors and start trading derivative­s onshore while they can still use p-notes to hedge their stock holdings, the people said.

Restrictin­g derivative trades would impact liquidity and price discovery in the market, as well as increase the cost of exposure to Indian stocks for those coming through the p-note route, say experts.

The role of p-notes has diminished over the past decade as the regulator made it easier for foreigners to directly access the India’s market. P-notes accounted for just 6.3 per cent of the ~28.6 lakh crore ($443.4 billion) held in equities, bonds and derivative­s at the end of May, according to Sebi data, down from 56 per cent at the end of June 2007. The notional value of p-note exposure to derivative­s was ~47,670 crore in May, down from ~55,780 crore at the start of the year, data from the regulator show.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY
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