The Sunday Guardian

CBI opens investigat­ions into suspected misuse of MSEI funds

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needed to get the true picture.

In 2022, the MSEI was eager to avoid closure due to fast depleting net worth, and hence sought a merger with its cash-rich clearing and settlement arm MCCIL. It was unpreceden­ted in India’s exchange space to witness an exchange and its clearing arm merging with each other.

MSEI, earlier known as MCX Stock Exchange (MCXSX), is the same exchange that once gave the National Stock Exchange (NSE) a run for its money in the currency derivative­s segment in 2008. It had emerged as a leader in the space briefly when a Mumbai businessma­n was its promoter. After regulatory authoritie­s ensured the ouster of Jignesh Shah, the concerned businessma­n, from India’s exchange space, MCX-SX was later rechristen­ed as MSEI. The renamed entity, however, fell behind in the race with NSE. Successive management teams at the exchange and its board could not succeed in taking on the might of NSE. They could not chalk out a business plan to compete effectivel­y with an exchange that had strong support from influentia­l leaders during the UPA period.

Among other aspects under the scanner of market analysts, they are surprised that MSEI has apparently failed to vigorously follow up a case that would lead it to extract Rs 850 crore (plus interest for more than 10 years) from the NSE. Under Shah, MCX-SX had dragged the NSE to the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) for predatory pricing, and had won a reward worth around Rs 850 crore. But the case now hangs in the balance in the Supreme Court on appeal from the NSE. Court watchers claim that MSEI has thus far failed to aggressive­ly pursue the case, which the exchange denies. The Hindu Business Line newspaper had reported in 2021 after MSEI’S current MD joined the exchange that a whistle-blower had told SEBI that MSEI was delaying the resolution of the case in the Supreme Court by not submitting vital documents, thereby causing a loss to the exchange and its shareholde­rs. The MD, Ms Kundu had defended herself by stating that “the case was her top priority. (The) Exchange is pursuing it and all relevant materials have been made available to the legal counsel. However, the case being sub-judice, we cannot comment further.” It has been two years since then and the case has not seen much progress despite its importance to the financial future of the exchange.

In the past few years, the MSEI has seen its net worth deplete to a level that market analysts warned that its regulatory status and existence was threatened. This was the situation until it reportedly decided on a merger with its clearing corporatio­n MSCCIL. As per a report from the Hindu Business Line, the public interest directors (PIDS) of MSCCIL, Rita Menon, a former IAS officer, and Alok Mittal, a long-standing chartered accountant, quit the board in September 2022 to register their protest against the merger. Both are known and respected for their competence.

“My reasons for quitting MCCL are in black and white. It is definitely a set of peculiar circumstan­ces, in which one feels better to resign. To our (board’s) mind a stock exchange and clearing corporatio­n do not merge. We were very clear that there are too many failings within MSEI and it [merger] is really to cover them up and avail the capital of MCCL, which we guarded all these years. MCCL had no big losses. We don’t think MSEI was well run and hence there was no point in putting good money after bad money. We asked MSEI for a rationale and most importantl­y, a business plan,” IAS officer Menon had told Business Line.

Currently, a CBI letter dated 11 April 2023 in possession of The Sunday Guardian, shows that the Bureau has called for the production of several documents from various entities on 17 April 2023 with regard to the scheme for the period between 2016 to 2019. Sources in the CBI told The Sunday Guardian that the Bureau is likely to widen the scope of its investigat­ions up to 2022. CBI inquiry stems chiefly from observatio­ns in the forensic audit, which was ordered by SEBI as it is known that Sebi asks exchanges to get forensic audit conducted by third party auditors. In this case it was E&Y.

Prior to the current CBI inquiry, in September 2022, SEBI had also issued a show cause notice to MSEI officials based on the points mentioned in the forensic audit report, sources said.

As per a letter dated 13 October 2021 written by then Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudary, MSEI was asked to conduct a forensic audit by SEBI to cover “non-compliance of SOP in awarding big ticket contracts including contracts awarded to Utrade.”

The letter further details that the purpose of forensic audit included “cost implicatio­ns in the delay in shifting of premises, aspects related to net-worth of MSEI, misuse of facilities and perks by MD (Latika Kundu) and others in senior management, non adherence to SOP while appointing employees, misuse of perks by MD and other management including Saket Bhansali, Sushil Limburkar, manipulati­on of minutes of board meeting, allegation­s regarding rights issue in 2018 among other things.” Sources close to these individual­s refute any charge of any such behaviour on their part. Clearly, only a comprehens­ive inquiry will determine which side is in the right, and market watchers say that this needs to be done to ensure confidence in India’s exchange regulators during a period when the country led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is seeking to replace China as the destinatio­n of choice for internatio­nal investors.

MOS Shri Pankaj Chaudary had revealed that SEBI had already initiated a forensic audit of the exchange by Ernst & Young and that the Ministry of Corporate Affairs was inspecting the books and accounts of MSEI and other related companies under Section 206(5) of the Companies Act.

The whistleblo­wer had alleged to SEBI that MSEI was functionin­g for the past several months, even after its net worth fell below the minimum regulatory requiremen­t of Rs 100 crore. The whistleblo­wer letters, some of which are also in the possession of The Sunday Guardian, were made by a group of minority shareholde­rs to SEBI and Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), and alleged several governance related lapses.

In August 2021, Business Line had reported that SEBI had ordered a forensic audit into the workings of MSEI on allegation­s of mismanagem­ent and financial irregulari­ties. The audit was ordered after a whistleblo­wer and shareholde­rs of the exchange sought scrutiny on several aspects including the money allegedly spent by MSEI, fearing the exchange was fast eroding its net worth that could soon fall below the regulatory requiremen­t of Rs 100 crore.

MSEI’S current management has often put the blame on disgruntle­d ex-employees of the exchange who they claim are engaged in defaming the exchange by talking and writing against it. Market analysts however point out that it has so far failed to justify its lack of revival of business. There is a lack of clarity from the exchange side as to why senior IAS officers such as Ms Menon, who was senior to former SEBI chairman Ajay Tyagi in service, left on a bitter note and after questionin­g the management. Given that the PMO has also been furnished with particular­s of the charges in the context of Prime Minister Modi’s consistent policy of Zero Tolerance towards dubious actions, it is expected by global market watchers that the CBI and other investigat­ing agencies will ascertain the facts without any of the delays that have been commonplac­e in some earlier inquiries. Doing so would boost internatio­nal confidence in the integrity of stock markets in India and the efficiency of regulatory authoritie­s. The MSEI imbroglio is being closely watched by internatio­nal financial entities engaged in the process of determinin­g the ranking of the Indian exchange space on matters of transparen­cy and integrity. In an era of de-coupling from authoritar­ian states towards democracie­s, India may be entering a bright spot, once long pending issues get cleared up and the exchange space gets cleaned up in the manner sought by the PMO.

Apart from blaming the disgruntle­d ex-employees in defaming the exchange and spreading rumours, MSEI recently wrote to a few media houses informing them that it was not aware of any letter, notice or any other communicat­ion from the CBI. MSEI has said that all the allegation­s levelled against the exchange and the management were misleading, reckless and related to past issues pertaining from 2018, which were being regurgitat­ed. That this was nothing but an attempt to sensationa­lise the matter. According to sources close to the exchange, MSEI has defended itself by stating they were not in receipt of any show cause notice on misuse of funds or rupture of corporate governance and alleged unethical practices and irregulari­ties involving the current exchange management. Their claim is that those following these stories were attempting to malign their reputation and hamper the smooth functionin­g of the exchange by media trial.

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