Business Today

Reputation at Risk

RIL to contest Sebi penalty for insider trading to protect its image with investors.

- By NEVIN JOHN & MAHESH NAYAK @nevinjl, maheshnaya­k

RIL to contest SEBI penalty for insider trading to protect its image with investors

The insider trading case against Reliance Industries, or RIL, India's second- largest company by market value, is back in focus. The capital markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India, or Sebi, recently banned the crude oil refiner and 12 other entities from trading in equity futures and options ( F&O) for one year. It also imposed a `1,300 crore fine — which included the fine of `447.27 crore with 12 per cent annual interest since 2007. The company has been told to make the payment within 45 days.

The case relates to a 10-year-old transactio­n in Reliance Petroleum or RPL. Sebi alleged that RIL acted in a fraudulent manner while dealing in RPL derivative­s. It stated that RIL manipulate­d the derivative­s segment by engaging in a pre-planned fraudulent practice, allegedly short selling a 4.1 per cent stake in RPL, valued at `4,023 crore, in the futures market and then in the spot market on the last day of the F&O expiry, thus making an unlawful gain of `513 crore.

G. Mahalingam, whole- time member, Sebi, said in his order that RIL made unlawful gains, which could not have been possible without the fraudulent and manipulati­ve strategy adopted by it. “This is a case of a unique strategy… manipulati­ng the settlement price in one market to gain across the volumes accumulate­d in the other market…,” Sebi said.

The ban and fine has impacted RIL’s reputation as internatio­nal investors and lenders take serious note of insider trading issues. The stock fell 4 per cent in the two trading days after the order. RIL can go up to the Supreme Court to defend its position, but it will be a long procedure, and it will have to live with it during the phase of large-scale fund raising for expanding its 4G business.

Payal Parikh, Partner at ANB Legal, says it will be interestin­g to see how the Securities Appellate Tribunal, or SAT, acts on the case. “For RIL, more than monetary, it’s a reputation­al risk. Being a global company, it would not want to be seen as involved in an unfair trade practice. RIL will have to prove (as per the stand it seems to have taken) that the entire process was purely a hedging mechanism and there was nothing deliberate­ly done to cheat and make gains,” she says.

Some critics asked why Sebi didn’t ban the company from accessing the capital market if it’s a grave mistake. On this, Parikh says, “Sebi regulation­s make it clear that it is the discretion of the market regulator if it wants to ban an entity or impose a fine or do both. As it’s a decade- old case, the regulator must have found it just to ban the entities from accessing the derivative­s markets and impose a penalty for the alleged offence.”

RIL says it will challenge “the untenable findings in the order” at the SAT. “There is no market manipulati­on by the company on account of the trades both in futures and cash segments. There are no profits or losses in a hedging transactio­n, leave alone undue profits. Open positions in excess of limits prescribed in circulars are neither fraudulent nor manipulati­ve as per the bye- laws and regulation­s of Stock Exchange and also as per the Securities Contracts ( Regulation) Act,” RIL executives argue. ~

THE COMPANY SAYS THE ENTIRE PROCESS WAS PURELY A HEDGING MECHANISM

 ??  ?? RIL Chairman Mukesh Ambani
RIL Chairman Mukesh Ambani

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