Business Standard

NSE seeks Sebi’s consent to settle colocation issue

- SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 20 July

The National Stock Exchange (NSE) of India on Wednesday filed an applicatio­n with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) for settling the colocation issue under the consent mechanism. “The applicatio­n has been filed under the settlement regulation­s of Sebi. Sebi will review the applicatio­n and get back to NSE on the future course of action. NSE will work with Sebi on early resolution of this matter,” said the exchange in a release.

The National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) on Thursday filed an applicatio­n with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) for settling the co-location (colo) issue under the consent mechanism.

“The applicatio­n has been filed under the settlement regulation­s of Sebi. Sebi will review the applicatio­n and get back to NSE on the future course of action. NSE will work with Sebi on early resolution of this matter,” said the exchange in a release.

The deadline for filing the consent applicatio­n for the NSE was to end in two days. According to Sebi regulation­s, the consent applicatio­n has to be made within two months of being served a show-cause notice (SCN) by the regulator.

On May 22, Sebi had served SCNs to the NSE and 14 of its current and former key management personnel for alleged irregulari­ties at its colo facility.

The trading systems used by the NSE at its colo facility were prone to manipulati­on, and they allegedly gave preferenti­al access to select brokers. The NSE has replied to the SCN issued by Sebi.

The consent process, an alternativ­e dispute redress mechanism, allows an alleged wrongdoer to settle a pending issue with Sebi by accepting penal action without admitting or denying the guilt.

Sources said the NSE had not put any settlement amount in the consent applicatio­n. In its applicatio­n, the NSE had said it had strengthen­ed its systems and processes to avoid a repeat of similar instances, said a source.

After an entity files for consent, the terms of settlement offered by the applicant are placed before Sebi’s high-powered advisory committee (HPAC), headed by a retired high court judge and three other experts. After analysing all the facts and circumstan­ces of the case, the HPAC makes its recommenda­tions on whether the applicatio­n be accepted. Thereafter, a panel of two whole-time members of Sebi considers the recommenda­tions and takes a decision.

The consent applicatio­n also comes within days of Vikram Limaye taking charge as managing director and chief executive officer at the NSE.

“Sebi will review our applicatio­n and then agree to take it for consent. I would like this to end as soon as possible. But I can’t come up with any timeline. I am sensitive to how the regulator thinks about these things. I don’t want to second guess. Sebi will have to follow a due process,” Limaye had told Business Standard on July 17, when he joined the NSE.

So far, Sebi has disposed of nearly 1,500 applicatio­ns through the consent route. It has also rejected over 1,000 applicatio­ns. Serious offences such as insider trading have been kept out of the consent settlement. The consent route is preferred by entities because it helps reduce adjudicati­on time.

 ??  ?? The consent process allows an alleged wrongdoer to settle a pending issue with Sebi by accepting penal action without admitting or denying the guilt
The consent process allows an alleged wrongdoer to settle a pending issue with Sebi by accepting penal action without admitting or denying the guilt

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