Business Standard

Sebi seeks to shield small investors from AT1 bonds

- SAMIE MODAK

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Tuesday took steps to restrict retail investor participat­ion in additional tier 1 (AT1) bonds — instrument­s which were in the news amid troubles at private sector lender YES Bank.

In a circular, the markets regulator said issuing AT1 bonds must be done compulsori­ly on the electronic book provider platform. More importantl­y, issuers and stock exchanges have to ensure that only qualified institutio­nal buyers are issued these bonds. Further, the minimum allotment and trading lot size shall be ~1 crore.

AT1 bonds are also known as perpetual noncumulat­ive preference shares, innovative perpetual debt instrument­s, and perpetual debt instrument­s. Typically, these are issued by banks to augment their capital base.

Sebi said retail investors might not understand the risks associated with these instrument­s.

“Given the nature and contingenc­y impact of these AT1 instrument­s and the fact that the full import of the discretion is available to an issuer, this may not be understood in the truest form by retail individual investors,”

Sebi said in a circular.

In March, several investors were caught off guard after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) proposed writing down AT1 bonds issued by the troubled YES Bank, forcing bondholder­s to take a 100per cent haircut and leading to losses of over ~10,000 crore.

“These instrument­s have certain unique features which, inter alia, grant the issuer (i.e., banks, in consultati­on with the RBI) discretion in terms of writing down the principal and interest, to skip interest payments, to make an early recall, etc without a commensura­te right for investors to legal recourse, even if such actions of the issuer might result in potential loss to investors,” Sebi had said.

Sebi has also tightened various disclosure requiremen­ts for issuers of such bonds.

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