Business Standard

Jignesh Shah petitions court against CBI move

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

Jignesh Shah, chairman emeritus , 63 Moons Technologi­es (formerly Financial Technologi­es India) has in his personal capacity petitioned the high court here against the First Informatio­n Report (FIR) registered by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) against him for getting a licence for the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) without allegedly having followed the procedures.

The petition also contests the CBI claim of a “windfall gain” made by 63 Moons between the in-principle and final approval for the initial public offering (IPO) of equity by MCX.

“I have challenged the FIR on two major grounds. We had obtained all necessary compliance­s required to launch an exchange i.e MCX — technology, registered office, warehouses, etc. And, not a penny was received by 63 Moons which can be claimed as windfall gain. In fact, the ministry of corporate affairs had termed 63 Moons a loss making entity. Hence, there are contrastin­g views by two government agencies on one issue,” Shah told journalist­s on Thursday.

CBI had begun a preliminar­y enquiry in 2015 on the licence obtained by 63 Moons for launch of futures trading on the MCX. This was converted last month into an FIR. 63 Moons is facing suits, raids and investigat­ion from other government agencies, including the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e and the economic offences wing of the Mumbai Police, in connection with the massive payment default in 2013 at its subsidiary, the National Spot Exchange (NSEL).

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