Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sebi plans early warning mechanism for markets

- Anirudh Laskar anirudh.l@livemint.com

INVESTOR PROTECTION System will rate stocks, caution investors of risks MUMBAI:

India’s markets regulator will introduce an early-warning system to caution people about the risks of investing in stocks of overvalued companies, those with unsustaina­ble business models and the ones that may go bankrupt, said two people aware of the developmen­t.

The proposed system will rate a stock on a numeric scale or a colour-coded system that will allow investors to easily identify risks associated with a stock on account of its trading pattern or owing to the condition of the company’s business, said the people, including a Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) official. Mutual funds have a similar system called a riskometer.

Sebi officials went on a study tour of Singapore and Hong Kong to study similar systems, said one of the two people cited earlier.

Singapore has a system of automatic “trade with caution” alerts that are generated when trading activity in a stock cannot be explained based on publicly available informatio­n.

“Since the equity market is rising steadily, investors are prone to take higher unwarrante­d risks while attempting to gain from the bull market. Three department­s at Sebi are working on creation of an early-warning system,” the person said. “Over the past few years, insolvency cases have increased, the number of initial public offerings have gone up and instances of shell companies started emerging.”

Sebi is also considerin­g asking listed firms to disclose certain additional details on a quarterly basis. These may include human resource data, cost-cutting details, changes in remunerati­on of top management, details of loans availed and their usage, and plans to service debts too, the person added. “Abnormalit­ies in the business could be assessed from certain balance sheet items too,” said the second person.

According to Sebi’s plan, the public will be shown a company’s business-related risks by comparing its data with the industry benchmark or the average of its listed peer group.

Apart from this, market-related risks too will be indicated to the investor, the people said.

“Sebi wants to ensure that whenever there is concentrat­ion in trading at least some percentage of the trade results in compulsory delivery to indicate the trade is genuine. At present there is no such criteria,” said the first person. Sebi is likely to publish a consultati­on paper on the marketwarn­ing system within the next six months, while the first set of rules are likely to be announced by the second half of fiscal year 2019, said the first person.

The present financial reporting system has to move towards some sort of evaluative reporting regime, according to P R Ramesh, chairman of Deloitte India.

“Room occupancy trends in the hotel industry; passenger kilometers for a company in the aviation industry; average revenue per user (ARPU) in a telecom company; order book in a constructi­on company; unfulfille­dorders in an automobile company etc. are important informatio­n.”

“All this may prove to be critical warning signals but are not coming along with the quarterly financials right now, and so the investor is unable to correlate the non-financial factors with the quarterly results,” said Ramesh.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? SEBI chairman Ajay Tyagi
MINT/FILE SEBI chairman Ajay Tyagi

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