The Free Press Journal

BSE set to end ties with S&P Dow Jones

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The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), Asia's oldest bourse, has decided to snap ties with S&P Dow Jones, which manages and operates benchmark Sensex, and plans to develop indices through its own in-house developmen­t team, exchange's officials said.

The two entities had announced a joint venture — Asia Index — in 2013 to provide an array of indices enabling global and domestic investors to participat­e in South Asia's vibrant economies.

The deal with BSE came after the expiry of the licensing arrangemen­t between India Index Services & Products (IISL), a joint venture of NSE and S&P-owned Crisil.

The exchange officials said that BSE will not renew its agreement with S&P Dow Jones Indices which expires on December 31, 2018 and it is looking to develop indices through its own team.

"Basically, we had done this tie-up five years back, but the joint venture could not do much in terms of expanding in the foreign jurisdicti­on, the usage of the indexes and all," BSE Managing Director and Chief Executive Ashishkuma­r Chauhan told investors in a conference call.

"And that is why we have decided not to renew it, but overall the impact on profits or on the revenues will be minuscule," he added.

Rival bourse National Stock Exchange's (NSE) indices are managed and operated by NSE Indices, an arm of NSE.

S&P Dow Jones Indices, a subsidiary of The McGraw-Hill Companies, is the world's largest global resource for index-based concepts, data and research.

BSE is Asia's oldest stock exchange and home to the iconic Sensex index a leading indicator of Indian equity market performanc­e.

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