Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Insider informatio­n: Regulator moves to plug Whatsapp leaks

TIGHTER OVERSIGHT Companies may be told to change how they handle pricesensi­tive informatio­n

- Jayshree P Upadhyay jayshree.p@livemint.com

n MUMBAI: The markets regulator is weighing tighter oversight to check leakage of privileged company informatio­n in the wake of unpublishe­d financial results finding their way into Whatsapp groups, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

Officials at the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) have suggested that companies frame a policy on how to handle unpublishe­d price-sensitive informatio­n, or UPSI, and convey the policy to employees; monitor big share price changes before important events like earnings releases; conduct background checks on employees dealing with such informatio­n; identify people involved in major deals and ensure informatio­n given to junior or external teams is on a need-to-know basis; and create separate work spaces with secured access for those preparing and discussing issues that are price-sensitive.

“These measures have been suggested by Sebi officials who are part of a panel on “fair market conduct”. The panel has four subcommitt­ees and is expected to submit a report next month to the regulator, said the first of the two officials cited earlier. Sebi formed the committee, led by former law secretary T K Viswanatha­n on, August 1, 2017 to review its rules on insider trading and unfair trading practices. Sebi did not respond to an email seeking comment sent on Friday.

Yet, the regulator is still considerin­g the possibilit­y that the leaks could be a systemic issue, not a company-specific one.

“Close to 24 companies are under probe and in the four com- panies where the regulator has passed orders, the facts and circumstan­ces are same that the leaked informatio­n mirrored the results. So, there is an assessment that it could be a systemic issue,” said the first person. This does not mean these companies will be let off the hook, he added.

So far, Sebi has passed orders against Axis Bank Ltd, HDFC Bank Ltd, Tata Motors Ltd and Bata India Ltd, asking them to conduct an internal inquiry and strengthen systems.

After the order, the four companies announced they would comply with the regulator’s directive.

The regulator and the Viswanatha­n panel are also considerin­g changes to the so-called model code of conduct, said the second of the two people cited earlier. The code was drafted by Sebi in May 2015, adopting a principles-based approach, moving away from the previous tick-box approach. All the companies then drafted new policies based on the code, includ- ing Axis Bank, HDFC Bank and Tata Motors. The code includes the principles a company must follow to prevent insider trading and leakage of price-sensitive informatio­n.

“This (rule changes) also assumes importance as most of the companies under (Whatsapp) probe have so far not identified the source of the leak,” he said. In the case of Bata India, the firm has informed Sebi that it has confirmati­ons from auditors and employees that they did not discuss the financial results with any third party.

In a report on March 9, KPMG India said companies need to control the number of employees with access to privileged informatio­n, while junior employees privy to such confidenti­al data should also be kept under the scanner.

According to Mukul Shrivastav­a, partner, fraud investigat­ion and dispute services, EY India, companies need to identify, relook at or reinvent their internal policies to mitigate leakage of price-sensitive informatio­n.

 ?? AFP/FILE ?? The scope of the planned tax would cover companies offering services such as advertisin­g or sale of user data
AFP/FILE The scope of the planned tax would cover companies offering services such as advertisin­g or sale of user data
 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi. The regulator is still considerin­g the possibilit­y that the leaks could be a systemic issue
MINT/FILE Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi. The regulator is still considerin­g the possibilit­y that the leaks could be a systemic issue

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