Business Standard

Sebi considers NSE, BSE plea on self-trading

- SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Mumbai, 18 January

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is considerin­g a plea by the stock exchanges to allow trading of their own shares under the “permitted-to-trade” category. If allowed, shares of BSE will trade on the BSE. Similarly, shares of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) will be allowed to trade on its own platform. “Sebi and exchange officials met last week to discuss the issue. The regulator is consulting more participan­ts and legal experts,” said a source. Sebi, BSE and NSE declined to comment. An exchange may allow trading in any company, even if not listed with it, under the permitted-totrade mechanism. SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY write

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is considerin­g a plea by the stock exchanges to allow trading of their own shares under the ‘permitted-to-trade’ category.

If allowed, shares of BSE will trade on the BSE. Similarly, shares of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) will be allowed to trade on its own platform.

“Sebi and exchange officials met last week to discuss the issue. The regulator is consulting more participan­ts and legal experts,” said a source. Sebi, BSE and NSE declined to comment.

An exchange may allow trading in any company, even if not listed with it, under the permitted to trade mechanism. For instance, the Multi Commodity Exchange of India is exclusivel­y listed on BSE but its shares also trade on the NSE under this segment.

Sebi’s regulation­s don’t allow exchanges' self-listing and self-trading. “The market regulator has taken a firm stand on not allowing self-listing. However, it is studying the risks in allowing self-trading,” said a regulatory official.

Legal experts are in favour. “Sebi’s primary concern for not allowing self-listing was that a regulated entity cannot regulate itself. However, the exchange can allow trading of its own securities under the ‘permitted to trade’ category, as there is no regulatory burden under this. It will help in improving liquidity for the shares of the exchange as the same will be available for trading by investors of both the exchanges,” said Sudhir Bassi, executive director, Khaitan and Co.

Adds Sandeep Parekh, managing partner at Finsec Law Advisors, “The regulatory framework is strong, thanks to the new Listing Regulation. By allowing self-trading, exchanges won’t be able to exploit any regulatory arbitrage.”

The permitted to trade segment is different from normal listing, as the issuer or a company doesn’t enter into any agreement with an exchange, say experts.

Brokers say the move will benefit investors. Swatantra Rustagi, president, Associatio­n of National Exchanges Members of India, says if self-trading is not allowed, “brokers who are members of only one exchange will have to go through a broker of another exchange” for trading in shares of bourses.

Market players say the permitted to trade option is an age-old practice. When NSE was set up, it relied on this to allow trading in companies that were only listed on BSE. Also, exchanges have often allowed trading of shares listed only on regional stock exchanges on their platform under this mechanism.

Typically, exchanges use their discretion while admitting companies in this segment. The company doesn’t have to pay any listing fee that it would otherwise pays to the exchange it lists on.

BSE’s ~1,240-crore initial public offering of equity (IPO) opens for subscripti­on on January 23. The exchange will list on NSE in early February. It remains to be seen if Sebi takes a decision on the issue before that.

“We will use the option of admitting our own shares under the permitted to trade category if and when Sebi allows,” said an official with the BSE during its IPO conference on Tuesday.

Both exchanges have agreed to Sebi’s decision to not allow self-listing. Earlier, NSE was demanding the option to selflist, expressing reservatio­ns against being regulated by a competing exchange.

Besides commercial function of providing listing and trading, exchanges have to perform the role of a regulator. The job of an exchange also involves regulating listed entities and intermedia­ries, such as brokers. The reason for not allowing self-listing was to do away with the inherent conflict of interest of regulating oneself. Self-trading, experts say, won’t result in any conflict of interest as it involves only use of the trading platform.

Globally, most regulators permit selflistin­g. Some of the self-listed stock exchanges include the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX), Hong Kong Stock Exchange, Singapore Stock Exchange, London Stock Exchange, Euronext, and Nasdaq. To avoid conflict of interest, most of these exchanges and their regulators have put in place mechanisms to ensure integrity and transparen­cy. Most of the arrangemen­ts include setting up committees or independen­t entities to conduct exchange’s regulatory and riskmanage­ment functions. NSE, too, had made a similar demand for being regulated or supervised by an independen­t body instead of a rival exchange. The regulator is said to be looking into the request.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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