Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Sebi looking to tighten the screws on P-Notes

- Jayshree P Upadhyay jayshree.p@livemint.com

MUMBAI: The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) proposes to levy a $1,000 fee on foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) for each participat­ory note (P-Note) issuance in an effort to cut down on speculativ­e investment­s.

In a consultati­on paper released on Monday, the markets regulator also proposed banning P-Notes that are based on derivative­s used purely for speculativ­e purposes.

P-Notes, or offshore derivative instrument­s (ODIs), are issued by registered FPIs to overseas investors who wish to invest in Indian stock markets without registerin­g themselves with Sebi.

The value of such instrument­s stood at ₹1.68 lakh crore at the end of April, about 6% of total foreign investment­s in Indian stocks and equity derivative­s.

Owing to their opaque nature, P-Notes have long been perceived as a conduit for black money.

Sebi’s proposed $1,000 fee will be levied every three years for every P-Note issuance, according to the discussion paper. This means that if an FPI issues a P-Note to five different investors, it has to pay $5,000 in fees.

“We understand from monthly ODI data reported by the ODI issuers that quite a few ODI subscriber­s invest through multiple issuers. It will discourage the ODI subscriber­s from taking ODI route and encourage them to directly take registra- tion as an FPI,” said the Sebi circular.

“The regulatory fee of $1,000 will reduce the arbitrage opportunit­y that currently the ODI subscriber­s enjoy while investing in the Indian markets,” said Sandeep Parekh, founder, Finsec Law Advisors.

In its discussion paper, Sebi has also suggested that investors wind down their speculativ­e positions using P-Notes by 2020.

The regulator has invited comments from the market till June 12.

“It will be incumbent on ODI issuing FPI to ensure that ODI is issued against those derivative­s which are purely for hedging purpose and not for naked speculatio­n,” said the Sebi discussion paper.

The government and the market regulator have been steadily tightening their regulation­s around ODIs to promote direct registrati­on through the FPI route in a bid to curb the shadow economy.

PNOTES ARE ISSUED BY REGISTERED FPIS TO OVERSEAS INVESTORS WHO WISH TO INVEST IN INDIAN STOCK MARKETS WITHOUT REGISTERIN­G THEMSELVES WITH SEBI

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