Business Standard

T+1 will make India pre-funding mkt for FPIS: Asifma

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

The Asia Securities Industry and Financial Markets Associatio­n (Asifma) has written to the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) reiteratin­g the perils of moving to a T+1 settlement cycle. It has said that shifting to such a system would make India a prefunding market for global institutio­nal investors, especially those from the US and Europe.

“A change to T+1 can add unwelcome trading frictions for FPI investment­s into India’s capital markets and may register concerns with MSCI,” said Asifma in a note sent to the regulator on Monday.

The securities settlement for FPIS is operationa­lly complex, involving coordinati­on among multiple entities like fund managers, custodians, brokers, clearing members, and exchanges. So, for investors in the US and Europe the current T+2 cycle was effectivel­y T+1, as investors were required to arrange funding for transactio­ns and for pre-settlement matching during their daylight hours a day before the trades settle. Regional holidays could further add to the default risk.

Moving to a T+1 settlement would necessitat­e booking foreign exchange on T day or T-1 for local custodians. Tax consultant­s typically compute tax on T+2 or T+3 day, which may lead to a situation where payin is received on T+1, but clients would have to hold on to their funds in Indian rupees for a day or two due to pending tax computatio­n. Moreover, such a shift could create unnecessar­y costs and settlement risks for global investors and failures in tradematch­ing may result in the settlement obligation being borne by domestic brokers.

“The window would be too short for the Securities Borrowing and Lending to practicall­y work and there could be spillover effects to the physically-settled derivative­s market,” Asifma said.

It said a number of operationa­l and technical challenges will need to be overcome, which could be facilitate­d by emerging technologi­es such as Distribute­d Ledger Technology.

Asifma said Taiwan, which had moved to a T+1 settlement for equities, has subsequent­ly moved back to T+2 after foreign investors faced problems.

China is the only large market that currently follows T+1, where shares are pre-delivered on trade date and money is settled on T+1. “This has been a headache for global investors who need to pre-fund and to pre-deliver shares on a free of payment basis. This is not a model to emulate or replicate,” Asifma said.

Sebi recently set up a panel of experts to look into the concerns over shifting to T+1, according to reports. The shorter trade settlement cycle is aimed at freeing up capital, making markets more efficient, and reducing the default risk faced by clearing corporatio­ns.

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