The Asian Age

MSCI warns over NSE’s bourses ban

Global body says the move may slash India’s weightage

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New Delhi, Feb. 16: Glo- bal index provider MSCI has termed the move by Indian stock exchanges to restrict derivative­s trading and data feeds overseas as anti- competitiv­e, as it could lead to unnecessar­y disruption.

Further, the move could impact India’s weightage and its asset classifica­tion in the MSCI indices.

It strongly suggested the Indian exchanges and markets regulator Sebi to reconsider this unpreceden­ted and anti- competitiv­e step.

This comes after leading stock exchanges — BSE, NSE and Metropolit­an Stock Exchange of India — on February 9 decided to curb all licensing agreements and stop offering live prices to internatio­nal bourses.

The coordinate­d move from the exchanges assumes significan­ce at a time when Singapore Stock Exchange ( SGX) has launched trading in singlestoc­k futures in 50 of India’s top companies that are part of the Nifty index — a developmen­t that has triggered concerns about liquidity moving out of the country.

“The breadth of the restrictio­ns announced by the Indian exchanges is unpreceden­ted in any equity market in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index series. MSCI strongly suggests that the Indian exchanges and their regulator Sebi reconsider this anti- competitiv­e action before it leads to any unnecessar­y disruption­s in trading or a potential change in the market classifica­tion of the Indian market in the MSCI indices,” MSCI said in a statement on Thursday.

MSCI said it is also in discussion with internatio­nal investors on the potential change in its indices.

The introducti­on of restrictiv­e measures that may result in a material deteriorat­ion of the accessibil­ity of an equity market is reviewed carefully by MSCI in consultati­on with internatio­nal institutio­nal investors and other market participan­ts and could lead to a change in market classifica­tion, said MSCI. Last week, Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi said that the move by exchanges should not be seen as a “retrograde step”.

On February 5, SGX introduced single- stock futures of Nifty 50 companies despite reservatio­ns expressed by the NSE — a move NSE chief Vikram Limaye said would shift liquidity out of the Indian markets.

 ??  ?? IT WARNED Sebi to reconsider this anti- competitiv­e action before it leads to any unnecessar­y disruption­s in trading or a potential change in the market classifica­tion of the Indian market in the MSCI indices MSCI CALLED the move by Indian stock...
IT WARNED Sebi to reconsider this anti- competitiv­e action before it leads to any unnecessar­y disruption­s in trading or a potential change in the market classifica­tion of the Indian market in the MSCI indices MSCI CALLED the move by Indian stock...

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