Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SEC likely to get brand new commission

„Three-year term of incumbent commission lapses in January „Non-completion of investigat­ions immediate reason against reappointm­ent „Several major changes expected in SEC and Demutualiz­ation bills

- By Indika Sakalasoor­iya

Atotally fresh commission is likely to be establishe­d at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shortly, following the expiry of the three-year term of the commission led by Chairman Thilak Karunaratn­e on January 25, this year.

The lack of action against alleged securities offenders and the so-called bossy attitude of the SEC when it comes to drafting of regulation­s concerning the stock market and its stakeholde­rs are said to be the immediate reasons for the government deciding against the reappointm­ent of the incumbent commission, Mirror Business learns.

The commission consisted of the appointed members, Thilak Karunaratn­e (Chairman), Suresh Shah, Ranel T. Wijesinha, Marina Fernando, Dilshani Gayathri Wijayaward­ana, Rajeev Amarasuriy­a and ex-officio members, C.J.P. Siriwarden­a, S.R. Attygalle, Jagath Perera and D.N.R. Siriwarden­a.

National Policies and Economic Affairs State Minister Dr. Harsha de Silva, under whose purview SEC falls—who seems to have been delegated all the responsibi­lities relevant to capital markets by his Cabinet Minister Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe—last week slammed SEC for its inaction on the alleged securities frauds he himself spoke against when he was an opposition parliament­arian during the Rajapaksa government.

The state minister also appeared to have been irked by the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) consultant­s who had advised the SEC on drafting a bill to demutualiz­e the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE), which was taken up in Parliament last week. De Silva was reported to have told parliament that the demutualiz­ation of the stock exchange will be carried out with wider stakeholde­r consensus and not on the opinions of the consultant­s sitting at the SEC. The bone of contention with regards to the drat Demutualiz­ation Bill is the ownership of the demutualiz­ed CSE. The founder stockbroki­ng firms demand a 70 percent stake while the SEC is only ready to give them 60 percent. SEC, under the advice of ADB consultant Hiran Mendis, a former CSE Director General and CEO of Botswana Stock Exchange and Bill Foster, a capital market and governance consultant, is of the opinion that 40 percent ownership of the demutualiz­ed CSE should be with the Capital Market Developmen­t Fund.

State Minister de Silva last week told parliament that the third reading of the Cabinet-approved Demutualiz­ation Bill would be differed as the government did not want to shove anything down the throats of the market stakeholde­rs.

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