Bangkok Post

Sebi tells firms to secure access to private data

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MUMBAI: Three companies under investigat­ion by Indian securities regulators after their results were leaked on social media were told to consider internal audits and background checks for employees handling potentiall­y stock-moving informatio­n, people familiar with the matter said.

The Securities & Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is seeking improved controls from Axis Bank Ltd, HDFC Bank Ltd and Tata Motors Ltd, whose quarterly results showed up on the messaging service of WhatsApp Inc before being disclosed to exchanges, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private.

Sebi’s plan to prevent the leaks from recurring also includes telling companies to create secure spaces for people handling data, to monitor trades and to ensure encryption, the people said. The regulator may mandate other companies under investigat­ion, whose final quarterly numbers were similar to data circulated on WhatsApp, to follow suit, they said.

“Our compliance and governance team is in regular touch with the regulator,” a spokesman for Tata Motors said in a statement. “While the company has robust policies and processes to manage such price sensitive informatio­n, we will investigat­e this incident thoroughly to identify and address process gaps and fix accountabi­lity.”

A Sebi official didn’t respond to requests for comment. A representa­tive of HDFC Bank declined a comment on the probe.

Axis Bank’s spokespers­on said the lender is working with the market regulator and “the best experts in the field” to investigat­e the matter, and would submit its report within the timelines set by Sebi.

The measures prescribed by regulators are part of discussion­s aimed at concluding inquiries into the firms, which are ongoing. A decision to end them must be approved by the regulator, the people said. Company insiders found to have benefited from leaked informatio­n could be penalised about 250 million rupees (119 million baht) or three times the illegal gains made, they said. A separate Sebi panel on fair market conduct may also look at leakage of price sensitive informatio­n via social media, the people said.

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