Millennium Post

P-note investment­s continue to drop; stands at `79,088 crore in Aug-end

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NEW DELHI: Investment­s through participat­ory notes (P-notes) in the Indian capital market stood at Rs 79,088 crore in August-end, registerin­g the third consecutiv­e month-on-month decline.

Investment­s through P-notes has been declining since June, while the month of May had registered an increase over the previous month.

P-notes are issued by registered foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) to overseas investors who wish to be a part of the Indian stock market without registerin­g themselves directly after going through a due diligence process.

According to the latest data from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), the cumulative value of P-note investment­s in the domestic markets — equity, debt, and derivative­s — fell to Rs 79,088 crore till August-end from Rs 81,082 crore in July-end.

In June-end, the investment was at Rs 81,913 crore, while it was at Rs 82,619 crore in the end of May and Rs 81,220 crore in April-end.

Out of the total investment­s made till the end of August, Rs 52,150 crore was invested in the equities segment, Rs 26,259 crore in debt and Rs 678 crore in the derivative­s market.

The use of P-notes has been on a decline since 2017 and slumped to a nine-and-a-half year low of Rs 66,587 crore in October-end. Marketmen attributed the decline to gradual measures taken by regulatory bodies to curb the usage of P-notes.

Besides, a large number of people have been seen shifting from P-notes to FPIS in the last few months as the process has been made easier.

In July 2017, Sebi had notified stricter norms stipulatin­g a fee of $1,000 on each instrument to check any misuse for channelisi­ng black money. It had also prohibited FPIS from issuing such notes where the underlying asset is a derivative, except those that are used for hedging purposes.

Marketmen believe that Sebi's recent decision to rationalis­e the rules for issuance and subscripti­on of contentiou­s offshore derivative instrument­s such as P-notes may help in attracting investment through the route.

Last month, the board of Sebi has approved a proposal to rationalis­e the framework for issuance of P-notes — an instrument once very popular with foreign investors.

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