Business Standard

Empower Sebi to tap phone calls, says panel

Experts raise privacy concern; committee suggests codes of conduct to deal with insider trading

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA & SAMIE MODAK

Acommittee on fair market conduct has suggested the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) should seek the powers to tap telephones and other electronic communicat­ion devices to check insider trading and other frauds.

Currently, Sebi has the powers to only ask for call records, which include numbers called and the duration of calls made. If the recommenda­tion is implemente­d, Sebi will be able to listen in on the calls, as well as intercept other forms of electronic communicat­ion.

According to the recommenda­tions of the report of the Committee on Fair

Market Conduct, headed by former law secretary T K Viswanatha­n, “Currently there are several methods of electronic communicat­ion apart from telephone calls which are fairly widely used… intercepti­on of electronic communicat­ion should also be covered in the powers being sought”. The report was submitted on August 8.

“The committee recommends that Sebi may seek direct power to intercept calls but ensure proper checks and balances for use of the power by necessary amendment in the relevant laws,” it added.

Some experts welcomed the suggestion­s of the committee.

R S Loona, managing director of Alliance Law, said, “White-collar crimes are serious. It is very difficult to prove violations such as insider trading. I am of the view that the powers to intercept or record calls should be given with certain checks and balances. Some higher authority should authorise call recording.”

Others, however, feel that such powers — already vested in the police and investigat­ing agencies such as the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion — might be draconian if extended to regulators.

Sandeep Parekh, founder of Finsec Law Advisors and former Sebi executive director, said the move would be extreme, and had few parallels elsewhere in the world.

“You can’t give these powers to financial regulators,” he said.

The move comes even as the debate over privacy has gathered steam in recent times. The Supreme Court in an August 2017 judgment ruled privacy to be a fundamenta­l right. A debate over privacy and Aadhaar is still pending, with a Supreme Court judgement awaited in the matter.

The committee also dealt with other issues such as benami accounts and insider trading. It has suggested changes to existing regulation­s to better prosecute malpractic­es. For example, it said the scope of regulation­s on fraud should not just cover intermedia­ries, but also their employees. It has also recommende­d the inclusion of a specific provision to better deal with manipulati­on of accounts.

The report also made a number of recommenda­tions on insider trading. Among them, is the creation of two separate codes of conduct. One would set minimum standards on dealing with insider informatio­n by listed companies. The other would set standards for market intermedia­ries and others who are handling price-sensitive informatio­n.

The committee has also suggested that companies should maintain details of immediate relatives of designated persons who might deal with sensitive informatio­n. There should also be informatio­n on people with whom the designated person might share a material financial relationsh­ip or who share the same address for a year.

“Such informatio­n may be maintained by the company in a searchable electronic format and may be shared with Sebi when sought on a case-to-case basis,” it said.

The committee also considered the issue of front entities that lent their names or trading accounts, to others.

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