Millennium Post

May need refiling for IPO: Tyagi

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NEW DELHI: The National Stock Exchange (NSE) may have to re-file papers for its Rs 10,000-crore IPO after addressing issues related to alleged preferenti­al access given to some brokers, watchdog Sebi's Chairman Ajay Tyagi on Monday said, terming the co-location case as "a serious matter".

The leading stock exchange had submitted to Sebi its draft prospectus for the public offer in December, but the approval has been hanging fire due to issues surroundin­g the ongoing probe into the NSE co-location case where some brokers allegedly got preferenti­al access to the exchange's systems.

A probe is under way to quantify any unlawful gains made by the brokers, allegedly in connivance with some NSE officials, due to this preferenti­al access. To a query on whether NSE will have to file a revised financial statements and DRHP, Tyagi said, "That is for them to decide... It is a serious matter. If I was an issuer, I will see that these are addressed and then only go back to DRHP." Asked whether it is regulatory requiremen­t to file a revised DRHP (Draft Red Herring Prospectus), the Sebi chief said, "I think they themselves will do it."

Tyagi was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of an event organised here by the Standing Conference of Public Enterprise­s (SCOPE). In the high-profile NSE co-location case, Sebi wants its forensic audit to quantify unlawful gains made by some brokers, even as the exchange is trying to reach a settlement of the case through consent mechanism.

Regulatory sources had earlier said Sebi decided to get an independen­t forensic audit done to quantify the alleged unlawful gains as probes conducted by the NSE itself and through an exchange-appointed auditor have failed to answer some very important points. The regulator will also engage with various shareholde­rs of the exchange as well as the government and other major stakeholde­rs in the capital market, given the enormity of the case. The Securities and Exchange Board of India is looking to complete its probe at the earliest on the matter, which was first brought to its notice in 2015 by a whistleblo­wer, but the investigat­ion gathered pace only in recent months.

The case relates to some brokers allegedly getting preferenti­al access through co-location facility at the NSE, early login and dark fibre, which can allow a trader a split- second faster access to data feed of an exchange. Even a split-second faster access is considered to result in huge gains for a trader.

Pending investigat­ions, Sebi has directed that all revenues emanating from co-location facility, including the transactio­n charges on the trades executed through such facility, be placed in a separate bank account. SHANGHAI: China on Monday opened up its $10 trillion bond market to foreign investors, in the latest liberalisa­tion move by Beijing as it seeks to draw in more fund flows as it battles slowing economic growth.

The new conduit comes via Hong Kong, where "qualified investors" will be able to buy debt in China -- the world's third-largest bond market after the United States and Japan.

Qualified investors include central banks, sovereign wealth funds, and other major financial institutio­ns, according to the People's Bank of China (PBOC) and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Their statement said the "bond connect" arrangemen­t between the Hong Kong and mainland Chinese markets went into "experiment­al operation" from Monday. The new bond connect scheme currently only allows foreign investors to buy Chinese debt.

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