The Free Press Journal

NSEL told to liquidate assets of Sensex breaches 18k as defaulters, auction collateral­s rupee rampage continues

The proceeds of commoditie­s auctioned and realisatio­n of assets of the defaulter should be deposited in escrow account and should be paid to selling members with the approval of the Commission

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Commodity markets regulator FMC directed NSEL to declare members, who have failed in making payments, as defaulters and liquidate all their realisable assets. The regulator also asked NSEL to auction defaulters' commoditie­s lying in the accredited warehouses as collateral, reports PTI.

The Forward Markets Commission’s (FMC) direction came a day after NSEL defaulted in the first tranche of payments to investors. NSEL was able to pay only Rs 92 crore out of the scheduled Rs 174.72 crore. The exchange had informed that nine members (buyers) did not pay their dues.

"As such the exchange should have processed to declare the members who have failed to meet their pay-in obligation, as 'defaulters’...and should have closed out their outstandin­g position," FMC said.

The regulator also ordered NSEL to ask defaulters to hand over books, documents, papers, assets, cheque books and other documents, and the same should vest with the exchange for the benefit of creditors.

"The Exchange, therefore should proceed to liquidate all realizable assets of the defaulter member/s to meet his/their pay-in obligation­s," FMC said in a letter to the NSEL board, which includes exchange's Vice Chairman Jignesh Shah.

The regulator also asked NSEL to bring it to the notice any deficiency being found by the Collateral Management Agency appointed by the exchange with regard to quality and quantity and value of the stock lying in the accredited warehouses.

"Based on the findings of the Collateral Management Agency take suitable punitive action as per the Law of the Land under intimation to the Commission," the letter said. The nine members which defaulted in making payments are Ark Imports Pvt Ltd, Loil Overseas Foods Ltd, Lotus Refineries Pvt Ltd, N K Proteins Ltd, NCS Sugars, Spin Cot Textiles, Tavishi Enterprise­s, Vimladevi Agrotech and Yathuri Associates. NSEL is facing the problem of settling Rs 5,600 crore dues after it suspended trade on July 31, following government directive.

Meanwhile, Sahara group retail venture Sahara Q Shop has an exposure of about Rs 227 crore to the beleaguere­d NSEL.

The NSEL has to pay Rs 1,170.09 crore to its related entity Indian Bullion Market Associatio­n (IBMA), which in turn has to repay to its several clients, including Sahara Q Shop Unique Products Range Ltd.

As per the NSEL disclosure, IBMA owes the maximum amount of Rs 226.95 crore to Sahara Q Shop.

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