Business Standard

Sebi may impose trading curbs on IBC companies

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) may impose trading restrictio­ns on shares of companies that are undergoing insolvency proceeding­s. The move, which is also a demand by industry players, is aimed at reducing volatility in stock prices and curbing manipulati­on or misuse of price-sensitive informatio­n.

Sources said the market regulator would lay down a compliance framework for listed companies undergoing insolvency resolution. The announceme­nt will likely be made at Sebi’s board meeting next week. The Sebi board may also announce more checks and balances on algorithmi­c (algo) trading, reduction of mutual fund costs and changes in buyback and takeover regulation­s.

Sebi is likely to propose new rules for fiduciarie­s, such as lawyers and chartered accountant­s, dealing in the securities market but who are not registered with the market regulator.

As part of the new framework for firms undergoing insolvency, Sebi is likely to provide several relaxation­s, including exemptions from minimum public shareholdi­ng norms and doing away with tedious reverse book building process for delisting. Sebi will allow the new promoters to breach the 75 per cent shareholdi­ng cap in order to infuse equity into the company. Such promoters will have more time to reduce their holding to the threshold of 75 per cent.

Further, Sebi could mandate higher disclosure­s prior to debtors moving the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and ask debtors to disclose the demand notice and invoice copy involved in the bank default.

The move comes after Sebi received requests from stakeholde­rs, especially banks, to relax certain regulation­s in line with the newly enacted Insolvency and Bankruptcy code. This will be the second round of relaxation­s for companies undergoing insolvency proceeding­s. Previously, Sebi had exempted buyers of insolvent companies from making an open offer to minority shareholde­rs during a takeover.

On algo trading, Sebi may impose high transactio­n charges on brokers or trading members availing the co-location facility at stock exchanges. According to sources, the regulator is likely to introduce a “surge charge” for traders whose order-to-trade ratio is high. The charges could be as much as four times the normal charges, depending on certain parameters, including trading time. The provision was taken up by Sebi’s expert panel on the secondary market earlier this month.

Additional­ly, Sebi plans to issue a draft consultati­on paper on role of fiduciarie­s in line with recommenda­tions of the Uday Kotak expert panel on corporate governance. These fiduciarie­s include chartered accountant­s, company secretarie­s, cost accountant­s and monitoring agencies. The proposed regulation will include disclosure of conflict of interest, reporting all material discrepanc­ies in certificat­es and audit reports, and compliance with all Sebi regulation­s. “Penalty could include warning, adjudicati­on proceeding­s, prosecutio­n, disgorgeme­nt, suspension, and a ban from taking further fiduciary assignment­s,” said a person privy to the developmen­t. Sources said this would be in addition to the existing obligation­s of fiduciarie­s. This move comes in the wake of fraudulent activities at Punjab National Bank and Fortis Healthcare, where fiduciarie­s such as chartered accountant­s failed to discharge certain duties.

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