Business Standard

NSE aims for listing in second half of 2018

- ABHIRUP ROY, DEVIDUTTA TRIPATHY & RAFAEL NAM REUTERS

The new chief executive of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) told Reuters he does not expect the bourse's eagerly awaited listing to take place until the second half of 2018.

The exchange had originally planned to go public this year, in what could be one of the country's biggest ever initial public offerings (IPOs).

Vikram Limaye, who took the helm in July after heading infrastruc­ture lender IDFC, said the delayed time frame was dictated by the need to address a regulatory probe into whether NSE employees had provided unfair trading access to select brokers.

NSE has applied to the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), the market regulator, to settle the issue, which has cast a shadow over the initial public offering that some market participan­ts have said could raise up to $1.5 billion.

Limaye, in an interview with Reuters, said the probe was ongoing and the exchange was awaiting a decision from Sebi on its settlement offer but had yet to hear from the regulator.

At the same time, consultant EY, one of the agencies appointed to look into the case, could submit its report within two weeks, he said. That report would then be presented to the NSE board and to Sebi, which will decide on the final action. NSE will re-submit its applicatio­n for an IPO after it has clarity from Sebi.

“I would certainly like to do the IPO as soon as possible but it's not up to me,” Limaye said. A listing by March would be “very difficult”, and a more realistic time frame would be the second half of next year, he said.

NSE had initially applied for an IPO in December 2016, intending to list by the first half of this year. NSE Chairman Ashok Chawla, in interviews with local media earlier this year, pushed back the deadline to December and later until March. The repeated delays reflect the difficulti­es NSE has faced in getting Sebi approval after the exchange disclosed that some brokers had been provided early access to its colocation servers. The servers are placed at the site of exchanges to speed up algorithmi­c trading.

The exchange appointed Deloitte to look into the case, and the consultant had discovered some brokers had exploited technical loopholes in the NSE's trading systems to gain first-access to the servers.

However, Deloitte was unable to prove whether NSE employees had colluded with brokers to provide early access. Sources had told Reuters the NSE’s disclosure contribute­d to the departure of former CEO Chitra Ramkrishna. Other executives at NSE have since departed, including co-founder Ravi Narain.

 ??  ?? NSE chief Vikram Limaye ( pictured) said a listing by March would be “very difficult”, and a more realistic time frame would be the second half of next year
NSE chief Vikram Limaye ( pictured) said a listing by March would be “very difficult”, and a more realistic time frame would be the second half of next year

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