Business Standard

FPI registrati­ons from Mauritius allowed: Sebi

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Tuesday said that foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) from Mauritius would continue to be eligible for registrati­on with increased monitoring. The clarificat­ion comes as a relief for market players as the Financial Action Task Force’s move to put Mauritius on the ‘grey list’ had created uncertaint­y.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Tuesday said foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) from Mauritius will remain eligible for registrati­on, but with increased monitoring.

Sebi’s clarificat­ion came after the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) — an inter-government­al body that sets anti-money laundering standards — placed Mauritius on the “grey list”, creating uncertaint­y among market players. One of the large foreign custodians had put a halt on trades from Mauritius on Monday, raising concerns that others would follow suit and all fresh registrati­ons and purchases routed through Mauritius would be stopped.

Another custodian put out a note saying FPIS currently registered from Mauritius would not be allowed to make fresh purchases of equity, debt, and hybrid securities, or undertake new derivative positions from February 28. Custodians would block the accounts for purchases for such FPIS and permit only sell trades.

Custodians had reached Sebi seeking clarificat­ion and they would likely reconsider the ban after the circular.

When a jurisdicti­on is placed on the “grey list”, it implies the country has committed to resolving the identified strategic deficienci­es within agreed timeframes and is subject to increased monitoring. “The FATF does not call for the applicatio­n of enhanced due diligence to be applied to these jurisdicti­ons but encourages its members to take into account this informatio­n in their risk analysis. The intermedia­ries should take note of the same,” said a note put out by Sebi on Tuesday.

The current Sebi guidelines state that investors resident in a country identified by the FATF as having strategic antimoney laundering or terror financing deficienci­es to which counter measures apply are ineligible to register as FPIS. The FPIS should not come from a jurisdicti­on that has failed to make sufficient

progress or not committed to an action plan to address the deficienci­es.

“While the FATF has put Mauritius on an increased monitoring list, it does not prescribe a countermea­sure, such as a sanction or financial embargo. To that extent, the immediate regulatory impact could be limited,” said Divaspati Singh, partner, Khaitan & Co. He, however, noted that being on the grey list would create a huge perception issue, especially among large investors, such as pension, endowment, and sovereign wealth funds, investment charters which may prohibit investment through Mauritius. Mauritius has been doing its bit to showcase its compliance with internatio­nal tax norms in the past year.

It includes measures, such as stepping up scrutiny of offshore fund structures.

“Since the completion of its MER (mutual evaluation report) in 2018, Mauritius has made progress on a number of its MER recommende­d actions to improve technical compliance and effectiven­ess, including amending the legal framework to require legal persons and legal arrangemen­ts to disclose of beneficial ownership informatio­n and improving the processes of identifyin­g and confiscati­ng proceeds of crimes," observed the FATF. About 80 per cent of FPIS from Mauritius are already classified as Category-ii by Sebi. The grey list tag dashes any hopes of these funds moving to Category I.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India