The Sunday Guardian

Markets silent on SEBI clean chit to NSE

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to suggest that noticees had any role in modifying the Circular of 2009 in the year 2013. Consequent­ly, they were also not responsibl­e for the non-transparen­t disseminat­ion of the modificati­on so made in the above mentioned circular of 2009 and therefore, the noticees cannot be held responsibl­e for any misconduct or non-compliance as far as laying of P2P connectivi­ty using dark fibre is concerned.”

He further said: “I observe that the allegation­s pertaining to the involvemen­t of the Noticees have been made only because of their associatio­n in some capacities with NSE during the relevant period of time. It is an admitted position that none of the noticees was occupying the position of a director in NSEIL, more particular­ly during the relevant period, when Sampark was allowed to lay down dark fibre lines to establish P2P connectivi­ty between the two stock exchanges for a few selected stock brokers.”

The list of those exonerated include Ravi Narain (former MD &

CEO), R. Nandakumar (former senior vice president, VP for operations), Mayur Sindhwad (chief operating officer, COO for trading), Sankarson Banerjee (chief technology officer, CTO for projects), G. Shenoy (CTO for operations), Suprabhat Lala (vice president, regulation­s), Ravindra Apte (former CTO), N. Muralidhar­an (former CTO) and Jagdish Joshi (former head for Colo).

Almost five years after a whistleblo­wer’s letter was published in Moneylife newsmagazi­ne about the alleged scandal in NSE’S highfreque­ncy trading using colocation—which gives traders advantages by a few millisecon­ds—the issue is back to square one. And now, the SEBI order says nothing was done to cause unfair advantage and there was nothing in the system through which brokers could make crores of rupees of illegal profit.

Expectedly, many found the order a surprise.

The issue, claimed experts, once again highlighte­d India’s lack of monitoring of such complex automated systems in the stock exchanges, leave alone trading transactio­n. No wonder, organisati­ons which handle such technology have, over the years, become a law unto themselves. No one controls them, no one supervises. There is nothing in the public domain to see if any proper investigat­ion was ever made into such alleged violations of such complex trading mechanism. A large chunk of the market does not even know how glitches can help some make fat cash, ostensibly because everything is below the radar. In a nation where whistleblo­wers are increasing­ly digging up DIRT—ICICI and Jet Airways are two such examples—it’s pertinent to see how this whole co-location scandal first surfaced.

It emerged from Singapore. The email was addressed to B.K. Gupta, DGM, SEBI and dated 14 January 2015. The email alleged NSE was offering a few highfreque­ncy brokers preferenti­al access to its servers by allowing them to place their servers in the NSE premises that benefited both the parties at the cost of others. This was a very, very serious charge. But SEBI remained silent and then it reacted very, very late.

Equally silent were the then NSE chairman, Ravi Narain and NSE MD, Chitra Ramakrishn­an.

There were many questions about the latest SEBI order.

Asked a top market analyst: “If none of the noticees were concerned with Sampark establishi­ng P2P connectivi­ty, how come these very noticees were identified by the SEBI team investigat­ing the matter? Was the person responsibl­e for non transparen­t communicat­ion of modificati­ons in the 2009 guidelines identified by the investigat­ion team? Why did the report did not remark on what appears to be a very shoddy investigat­ion?”

Remarked another expert: “The whole matter has been given a burial in a context where there will be an IPO and possible merger with MCX. The government needs to overhaul the functionin­g of regulators.”

What was a surprise was the fact that this very SEBI, in May 2019, had indicted well-known market economist Ajay Shah and Suprabhat Lala, a senior official of NSE in the algo trading scam. So let’s read what the order said. It said a private firm of Sunita Thomas (Lala’s wife and sister-in-law of Ajay Shah), “commercial­ly exploited” confidenti­al data obtained from the NSE for writing algo trading software. SEBI had also directed NSE to take legal action against Ajay Shah, Sunita Thomas, her firm Infotech Financial Services Pvt Ltd, and Krishna Dagli, director of the company.

This was not all.

One of the orders indicted both Narain and Ramakrishn­a, for overlookin­g conflict of interest in awarding contract to Infotech Financial. Earlier, SEBI had ordered disgorgeme­nt of profits from NSE and salaries of former Narain and Ramkrishna. The regulator also asked NSE to disgorge an amount of Rs 624.89 crore along with interest calculated at the rate of 12% per annum to the Investor Protection and Education Fund (IPEF).

And it is very pertinent to note what an earlier SEBI order had said. In the order that related to “dark fiber” involving unregister­ed service provider, Sampark Entertainm­ent, SEBI had said that since NSE is a recognised stock exchange and the leading market infrastruc­ture institutio­n, it occupies a pivotal role as a front line regulator. Therefore apart from reformator­y steps under Sections 11, 11(4) and 11B of the SEBI Act, 1992 and Section 12A of the SCR Act, 1956, “considerin­g the gravity of the allegation­s that have been establishe­d…, additional exemplary directives need to be issued could pose an effective deterrence and dis-incentive to the noticee (NSE) to perpetrate such kind of violations in future so far as administra­tion and governance of its Colo facility is concerned.”

SEBI had directed NSE to deposit Rs 177.43 crore—considered a reasonable portion of revenue— earned by NSE through its co-location facility from 8 May 2015 to 10 September 2015 to the Investor Protection and Education Fund (IEPF) of SEBI. Now, since NSE had allowed Sampark to provide P2P connectivi­ty without having proper licence, to a few stock brokers in a preferenti­al manner— denying other stock brokers the same service—and that the said illegitima­te service continued for a period of four months, SEBI had asked Sampark to transfer Rs 62.58 crore to IPEF. Two colocation traders, Way-2-wealth and GKN Securities, were found to have “fraudulent­ly availed of P2P connectivi­ty with the help of an unauthoriz­ed Telecom Service Provider (Sampark) at the Colo facility of NSE…IN a manner to gain undue advantage in terms of low latency and high bandwidth in data transmissi­on as compared to other stock brokers in securities market,” said SEBI. The regulator also asked W2W to deposit Rs 15.34 crore in IPEF and GKN Rs 4.9 crore.

And now, the same SEBI says nothing happened and that it has found nothing illegal. Given its awesome power, it is no wonder marketmen are buzzing about the order, but none seems in a rush to voice such views in public. To protect the credibilit­y of exchanges and institutio­ns in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has demanded a zero tolerance policy towards any wrongdoing, needs to order the premier investigat­ing agency to

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