Business Standard

Bourses may modify commodity contracts

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has decided to give more flexibilit­y to exchanges regarding modifying contract specificat­ions for all commodity derivative­s contracts. Changes that exchanges can make include margins, launch date, among others.

The market regulator on Thursday allowed exchanges to carry out non-material modificati­ons and report to the regulator and market participan­ts at least 10 days in advance.

The regulator has also allowed exchanges to modify contract specificat­ions for material modificati­ons for all running contracts that have ‘nil’ open interest and those yetto-be-launched contracts. Such modificati­ons shall require approval from the product advisory committee (PAC) and the regulatory oversight committee (ROC) of the exchange. Such changes need to be brought before Sebi and market participan­ts at least one month ahead of their scheduled date of applicatio­n.

In yet another change, Sebi has asked exchanges to get prior approval from it for material modificati­ons, which shall require deliberati­ons and approval from PAC and ROC before seeking regulatory approval.

“The permission to modify contract specificat­ion parameters of commodity derivative­s contracts is subject to the condition that before introducti­on of any modificati­on in contract specificat­ions, the exchanges shall inform Sebi and market participan­ts along with reasons for the modificati­ons, according to the timeline given. However, this shall not apply to certain modificati­ons which are required to be effected immediatel­y, considerin­g the exigencies of the situation, according to the surveillan­ce measure,” said a Sebi circular.

Currently, exchanges approach Sebi for approval for changes.

Sebi has classified non-material modificati­ons as symbol, descriptio­n, tick size, strikes, margins, etc. For material modificati­ons with ‘nil’ open interest, the regulator has defined as last trading day, trading unit, price quote, delivery centre, premium, and discount, etc.

The third category which requires Sebi’s approval 30 days in advance with broad-based deliberati­ons, Sebi defined as contract launch calendar, trading period, daily price limit, etc.

“The changes in contract modificati­ons would bring in transparen­cy. They would also have both positive and negative sides of impact. But exchanges that were implementi­ng changes with short notice would require streamlini­ng the process of modificati­ons,” said Kishore Narne, associate director, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

 ??  ?? The market regulator has asked exchanges to get prior approval from it for material modificati­ons
The market regulator has asked exchanges to get prior approval from it for material modificati­ons

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