Business Standard

Sebi issues show-cause notices to 300 brokerages in NSEL case

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has issued a showcause notice to 300 brokerages whose clients lost significan­t money in the infamous ~56-billion National Spot Exchange (NSEL) scam.

Sebi’s notice alleged that these brokerages no longer meet the “fit and proper person” criteria and hence should not be allowed to continue as intermedia­ries.

The regulator asked these brokerages to explain why the action recommende­d should not be taken against them under the prescribed provisions of Sebi (intermedia­ries) and Sebi (stock-brokers and sub-brokers) regulation­s.

Sebi’s fit and proper criteria defines basic conditions that intermedia­ries need to fulfill in order to perform their duties and responsibi­lities. Among key conditions are integrity, absence of any conviction and not being a willful defaulter.

The regulator said that it has initiated adjudicati­on proceeding­s and appointed a designated authority on September 21 to inquire into the alleged violation of the fit and proper norms.

Business Standard reviewed the notice served to brokerages.

The notice explains how NSEL did not conduct its business in accordance with the condition set by the government by allowing trades in the paired contract.

In June 2007, the central government granted an exemption to NSEL for complying with provisions of Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act (FCRA) subject to certain conditions.

The regulator added that exemption was only for all one-day forward contracts, including no short sale by the members of the exchange and outstandin­g positions of the trades would at the end of the day result in delivery.

It is observed that members of NSEL and Sebi registered trading members had facilitate­d trading in the paired contracts between September 2009 and August 2013.

“Being a member of NSEL and by participat­ing and/or facilitati­ng your clients in such paired contract, you have violated the intermedia­ry’s regulation­s. It is alleged that continuanc­e of your registrati­on as market intermedia­ry is detrimenta­l to the interest of the securities market,” Sebi said in the notice.

The market regulator has asked these brokerages to file a reply, along with documentar­y evidence within 21 days of the notice.

The move comes after the Sebi board, at its September 18 meeting, had decided to take action against 116 brokers involved in the ~40-billion investor default.

Sources said 17 brokers account for 80 per cent of the total default amount. The action was based on the investigat­ive report submitted by erstwhile commodity regulator Forward Markets Commission (FMC) and economic offence wing of the Mumbai Police. This action is expected to put an end to the five-year old matter involving some prominent brokers and 13,000 investors.

Interestin­gly, the show cause notices were served ahead of Sebi completing three years of its merger with the FMC on September 28. Sources said that the government had given the market regulator three years to conclude the matter. It is also learnt that 30 per cent of the brokerages that were being slapped with the notices were not aware of this move. They were never being examined or inspected in the NSEL matter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India