Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sebi brings location curbs back for brokers, dealers

- Jayshree P Upadhyay and Devina Sengupta

MUMBAI: When the coronaviru­s outbreak happened in 2020, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) was in favour of allowing brokers, dealers, and fund managers to work from home permanentl­y. Two years later, Sebi is bringing back the so- called location curbs, prompted by the recent frontrunni­ng scandal.

The market regulator has sent a circular to broking houses and fund houses that every individual with a trading terminal registrati­on has to work from office, said three people with direct knowledge of the matter, seeking anonymity. “The regulator believes the two-year pandemicle­d work-from-home caused surveillan­ce lapses which, in turn, led to a spike in cases of manipudefa­ult. said one of the three people, a Sebi official.

In July 2020, former Sebi chief Ajay Tyagi had said: “Stock brokers working permanentl­y from home is worth considerin­g. Currently, trading from home has worked without a glitch or At present, working from home is a temporary relaxation. We will also analyse the downsides.”

Following the Sebi circular, the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) has issued an advisory to all fund houses and members, asking them to resume work from office. “Flexibilit­y given to employees to work from homes, especially those handling critical functions that deal with the markets, such as investment­s, dealing, operations, compliance, risk management, etc., may be withdrawn. It may be implemente­d at the earliest, but no later than June 10, 2022,” said AMFI in a May 25 circular.

Whenever a stock broker operates a terminal from a particular location, the place is considered his branch office and requires display of name boards and stock broker’s certificat­e. The broker is also required to register the location in the exchange system. On March 20, 2020, as the pandemic spread, Sebi relaxed this rule, and exchanges allowed trading from locations other than the registered ones. “The regulator did not extend this exemption and, in fact, issued a directive to brokers in third week of this month that anyone who operates a trading terminal must work from office,” the second person said.

Queries emailed to a Sebi spokespers­on remained unanswered.

“While traditiona­l brokers were anyway on the way of calling their entire work force back from home, this will have a bigger impact on new-age fintech firms who were offering work from home as an incentive to its workers,” said the third person, a top executive of a brokerage.

Discount brokerage firm Zerodha has 90% of its staff working from home. “The 10% staff that comes to office includes risk, compliance officers and anyone who owns the registrati­on of a trading terminal and is trading on behalf of our client. For us, this may not make much of a difference since most of our clients prefer to trade on their own through the app,” a Zerodha executive said.

“Ever since the pandemic started, one of the biggest risks and challenges faced by almost all organizati­ons is security of the organizati­on and its client data. It is all the more challengin­g for companies which are in fintech businesses such as broking, mutual fund houses and asset management companies (financial intermedia­ries) since they are dealing with clients’ data and using trading platform having high surveillan­ce of market regulator,” said Raunak Singh, partner, Avitr legal.

 ?? ?? Rentals from DCCDL’s retail real estate assets grew 67% to ₹461 crore in last fiscal year from ₹276 crore in 2020-21.
Rentals from DCCDL’s retail real estate assets grew 67% to ₹461 crore in last fiscal year from ₹276 crore in 2020-21.
 ?? ?? The Sebi action is prompted by the front-running scandal.
The Sebi action is prompted by the front-running scandal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India