Business Standard

NSE & SGX GIFT connect likely to take place by December

Regulators have asked stock exchanges to find a commercial solution feasible to both

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Amid arbitratio­n proceeding­s, the proposed collaborat­ion between the Singapore Exchange (SGX) and the National Stock Exchange (NSE) to jointly offer trading at Gujarat Internatio­nal Finance Tec (GIFT) City could take shape before the end of the year, said people with knowledge of the developmen­t. GIFT is India’s only Internatio­nal Financial Services Centre (IFSC). Sources said currently both the exchanges are seeking feedback from market participan­ts. In October, they could approach their respective regulators with the proposed plan and later launch the products for GIFT City. A source said trading in the new products could start by December.

Sources say the regulators of both the countries are keeping a tab on the developmen­t and also supervisin­g the product specificat­ions and operationa­l issues.

“All stakeholde­rs want to resolve the ongoing legal tussle. Regulators have asked respective stock exchanges to find a commercial solution which is acceptable and feasible to both,” said a source.

Sources say there could be some changes required to the IFSC regulation­s to facilitate the proposed plan.

In an email response to this newspaper, NSE spokespers­on said, “The matter is sub judice. Hence, we cannot offer any comment on the matter.” An query sent to SGX did not elicit an immediate response. NSE and SGX restarted talks over GIFT City following a meeting held between the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) and its Singapore counterpar­t Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). “Sebi and MAS held discussion­s on various issues of cooperatio­n, including the amicable resolution of the NSE and SGX issue,” Sebi had said in a statement on July 25.

“Both the regulators agreed that the collaborat­ion between the two authoritie­s would be further strengthen­ed so as to derive benefits for capital markets of

both the countries. Both regulators also agreed that NSE and SGX would carry out necessary discussion­s to come up with a solution that is acceptable to both the parties,” the statement added.

According to experts, GIFT-connect between SGX and NSE would enable the Singapore bourse’s clients to deal in Indian derivative­s. Just like SGX, GIFT City is a low-cost trading destinatio­n as it offers exemption from capital gains, securities transactio­nal tax (STT) and stamp duty. At present, dollar-denominate­d contracts of Nifty are traded at NSE IFSC. In February, the NSE and BSE decided to stop giving data access to foreign bourses such as Singapore and Dubai. The move was to curb offshore derivative­s trading in Indian products.

To counter the move, SGX, where trading volumes in Indian products account for substantia­l volumes, announced the launch of new India products to replace Nifty-licensed products. The move was challenged by NSE as the new products were an exact replica of Nifty products that it licensed. The matter latter went into arbitratio­n.

Currently, arbitratio­n proceeding­s got deferred after NSE and SGX resumed talks over GIFT City. “Pending the outcome of discussion­s, the learned arbitrator has granted a deferment of the arbitratio­n proceeding­s between SGX and IISL, the NSE’s index company,” SGX had said in a statement in July.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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