The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

India’s smallest stock market eyes block deals

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The Metropolit­an Stock Exchange of India plans to woo brokerages to execute large stock trades on its venue, as a new management team tries to breathe life into a bourse that has floundered for a decade. Backed by billionair­es Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la and Radhakisha­n Damani, MSEI aims to wade into the block deals segment, which is worth as much as five trillion rupees (US$78bil), according to chief executive Udai Kumar. India’s regulator defines a block as a single trade having at least 500,000 shares or a minimum value of 50 million rupees. Money managers like dealing in large sizes because it ensures transactio­ns are done before the market can hear about them and react by raising or lowering prices. “We are telling institutio­nal investors to come to our platform – there will be no slippages or price impact,” said Kumar, who was named chief executive officer last year to turn around the bourse. The MSEI is in talks with half a dozen large investment banks to bring in such deals, he said. That’s easier said than done. Despite starting in 2008, MSEI has failed to seriously threaten its rivals. It had a 4.3% share of currency derivative­s at the end of March, and barely exists in India’s US$2 trillion equity market, which is dominated by the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd and BSE Ltd. The company has struggled to make a mark since a payment default in 2013 at a related exchange forced the original founders to sell. A clutch of financial institutio­ns now own more than 34% of MSEI, as do investors including Jhunjhunwa­la, Damani and Nemish Shah, according to bourse’s website. Efforts are being made to fix the “erosion of trust” through investor education initiative­s, broker events and media campaigns, Kumar said. The exchange is also developing short-term debt instrument­s to help mutual funds and insurance companies hedge their portfolios, Kumar said in an interview at his office in Mumbai, without providing details. “It will be an uphill task for MSEI to break into the big boys’ bastion,” said Deena Mehta, managing director at Mumbai-based Asit C Mehta Investment Intermedia­tes Ltd and former president of the BSE. “It must find areas where the rivals don’t have a strangleho­ld.” Products launches in currency, interest rate futures and corporate bonds are also planned, said Kumar. The MSEI got 250 companies to list exclusivel­y on its venue – most of whom migrated from the 15 regional bourses the market regulator shut down three years ago – and slashed fees and transactio­n costs to levels it claims are the lowest in the country.

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