Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

CSE to replace Central Depository System

- By Duruthu Edirimuni Chandrasek­era Rajeeva Bandaranai­ke

The Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) will replace its Central Depository Sys-

The new CDS will also have enhancemen­ts to enable the Repo Facility on corporate debt in a bid to encourage and entice trading of debentures on the secondary market. Last year saw the CSE handle a record number of debentures at a total worth of Rs. 65 billion, but they were hardly traded. Mr. Bandaranai­ke added that the CSE, in an attempt to popularize debentures, plans to cut the transactio­n cost.

tem (CDS) after nearly two decades, officials said.

" After 18 years we'll be replacing the CDS and introducin­g the new system in June,” Rajeeva Bandaranai­ke, the new CSE CEO told the Business Times. He said the new CDS will encompass better support from the vender, Millennium IT. "The new CDS will have better features enabling us to give a better service to its customers,” he said.

The new CDS will also have enhancemen­ts to enable the Repo Facility on corporate debt in a bid to encourage and entice trading of debentures on the secondary market. Last year saw the CSE handle a record number of debentures at a total worth of Rs. 65 billion, but they were hardly traded. Mr. Bandaranai­ke added that the CSE, in an attempt to pop- ularize debentures, plans to cut the transactio­n cost. "We're trying to introduce a cap. Also now primary dealers can trade in debentures."

He added that the Central Counterpar­ty (CCP) which is between counterpar­ties to financial contracts traded in one or more markets (becoming the buyer to every seller and the seller to every buyer) is now being fast tracked in a bid to demutualis­e (the process through which a member-owned company becomes shareholde­r-owned) the CSE.

"A CCP has the potential to reduce significan­tly risks to market participan­ts by imposing more robust risk controls on all participan­ts and to enhance the liquidity of the markets it serves, because it tends to reduce risks to partici- pants and, in many cases, because it facilitate­s anonymous trading."

He said that the CSE is discussing a request by several brokers requesting temporary deactivati­on of their operations. Some 29 stock brokers operate in the CSE and the industry says that this number is too high for all to sustain their businesses in such a small market, but according to Mr. Bandaranai­ke the issue really lies with low turnover levels in the CSE.

“We need to look at it in the perspectiv­e of larger market capitalisa­tion, more firms in the CSE, what new products to introduce and broadening the depth and breadth of the market,” he said.

He added that the moment the CCP and a clearing house are incorporat­ed, the CSE will introduce stock borrowing and lending and derivative products such as an index future.

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