Khaleej Times

MSCI urges India to review its measures

- Andrea Tan

singapore — A move by Indian exchanges to stop all licensing deals with their foreign counterpar­ts is anti-competitiv­e and could jeopardise the country’s standing in indexes tracked by global funds worth trillions of dollars.

“If the changes are put into effect, the result will be disruptive and harmful to internatio­nal institutio­nal investors in Indian equities,” New York-based MSCI Inc said in a statement on Thursday. It said it is monitoring the situation and warned India’s market classifica­tion could change unless the “restrictiv­e measures” are removed.

Indian stocks have an 8.4 per cent weight in MSCI’s emerging markets index, the fourth-largest behind China, South Korea and Taiwan.

The National Stock Exchange of India Ltd, together with other Indian bourses, late on February 9 said they would end all licensing agreements and stop offering live prices to overseas venues. The decision is the latest attempt to discourage offshore trading and promote a tax-free business hub in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state Gujarat.

“MSCI strongly suggests the Indian exchanges and their regulator reconsider this unpreceden­ted anti-competitiv­e action before it leads to any unnecessar­y disruption­s in trading or a potential change in the market classifica­tion of the Indian market in the MSCI Indexes,” MSCI said.

The move by Indian venues means overseas bourses including Singapore Exchange Ltd and CME Group will be forced to stop offering equity derivative­s based on domestic Indian indexes. The decision also raises questions on how India will fit in with the global financial system.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Indian stocks have an 8.4 per cent weight in MSCI’s emerging markets index.
— Bloomberg Indian stocks have an 8.4 per cent weight in MSCI’s emerging markets index.

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