Sebi levies Rs 1.15 cr fine on Voltaire Leasing and Finance, others for fraudulent trading, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Markets regulator Sebi has imposed total fine of Rs 1.15 crore on Voltaire Leasing and Finance Ltd, its officials, one entity and eleven individuals for fraudulent trading in the shares of the firm. They violated Prohibition of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices norms.

The investigation period was between August 2014-July 2015. They had manipulated the price of the scrip and the company and its directors-Dilip Rajkumar Patodia, Amlesh Sadhu and Harivallabh Mundra – were also part of the scheme for manipulating the price in the scrip.

“By executing manipulative trades, as has been executed by these noticees in the instant matter, the price discovery system itself is affected. It also has an adverse impact on the fairness, integrity and transparency of the stock market,” Sebi said.

All the entities forming the group of off-market transferors, the group of sellers and the company and its directors in charge of its affairs at the time of the violations, have manipulated the scrip price.

The firm is facing a fine of Rs 10 lakh and the three directors are facing fine of Rs 15 lakh each.

Besides, Sebi has imposed fine of Rs 5 lakh each on others.

In another order, Sebi levied total fine of Rs 88 lakh on 12 entities for violation of several market norms.

These include Nikita Forex Pvt Ltd, Nature Infosoft, Topline Fabrics and Tushar Commodities, apart from eight individuals.

The fine has been levied in the range of Rs 6-11 lakh.

It was found that they acted as a group, orchestrated a fraudulent scheme where a false and misleading information was circulated through bulk SMSes to create artificial demand, in order to offload large number of shares of Kalpa Commercial to gullible investors.

Besides, the transactions were not in conformity with the provisions relating to spot delivery contract which require that actual delivery/ transfer of shares and the payment should be on the same day as date of contract or the next day.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

PSBs line up local AT-1 bonds issues, but private-sector lenders stay away, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Public sector banks have started issuing AT-1 bonds in the domestic market more than a year after wriding down of such bonds of Yes Bank spooked the market

However, private sector banks are still keeping away and raising money via the instrument overseas, where interest rates are low.

At present, nearly three-four state-owned including SBI, Union Bank, Canara Bank and Bank of Baroda are looking to raise funds through AT-1 bonds.

In March this year, prodded by the Finance Ministry, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had relaxations in valuation norms. However, the main issues that AT1 bonds will continue to be treated as 100-year bonds stayed. The deemed residual maturity of Basel-III AT-1 bonds would be 10-year until March 31, 2022. Sebi said from April to September 2022, it would be valid at 20 years, and from October 2022 to March 2023, it would have a life span of 30 years. From April 2023, the residual maturity will be 100 years from the date of issuance of the bond.

In September SBI Rs 4,000 crore via additional Tier 1 bonds at a coupon rate of 7.72%, the first such issuance in the domestic market after Sebi issued new rules.

The plan

SBI is weighing options to raise money either through local additional tier-1 securities for the third time in this financial year or rupee-denominated ‘masala’ bonds for overseas investors. Bank of Baroda has approved the issuance of AT1 and AT11 bonds worth Rs3000 crore. Capital Raising Committee of our Bank has today approved the issuance of Basel III Compliant Additional Tier 1 (AT1) / Tier II Bonds for an aggregate total issue size of Rs3000cr in single or multiple tranches,” the bank said earlier this month.

What are AT1 bonds?

These are unsecured bonds which have perpetual tenure — or no maturity date. They have a call option, which can be used by the banks to buy these bonds back from investors. AT1 bonds are subordinate to all other debt and only senior to common equity. Mutual funds are among the largest investors in perpetual debt instruments, and hold over Rs 35,000 crore of the outstanding additional tier-I bond issuances of Rs 90,000 crore.

The mutual fund position

Mutual funds, which once used to buy heavily in AT1 bonds, are lukewarm about this asset class after the banking regulator last year ordered that these instruments be written off in Yes Bank’s state-sponsored bailout. Also, on March 10, Sebi had ordered mutual funds to cap ownership of bonds with special features at 10% of the assets of a scheme and value them as 100-year instruments from next month, potentially triggering a redemption wave. Later, the capital markets regulator eased valuation rules but with some riders after the finance ministry asked it to withdraw the directive to mutual funds.

The muted response by MFs had prompted the lenders to tap the overseas market.

Perpetual bond sales by banks have nearly halved to Rs 18,772 crore in FY21 from Rs 34,860 crore three years earlier.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SEBI introduces swing pricing in debt mutual funds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Securities and Exchange Board of India has decided to introduce the concept of ‘swing pricing’ for all open-ended debt mutual fund schemes except overnight funds, gilt funds and Gilt with 10-year maturity funds. This move is aimed at discouraging large investors from sudden redemptions. The framework will be applicable from March 1, 2022.

Swing pricing is a mechanism by which fund houses can adjust a scheme’s net asset value (NAV) in response to the flows into or out of the fund. It is aimed at reducing the impact of large redemptions on existing investors by reducing dilution of the value of a fund’s units. When swing pricing is triggered on account of higher-than-average inflows or redemptions, the NAV of a scheme gets adjusted up or down, resulting in the investor subscribing or pulling out bearing the trading costs rather than existing unitholders.

The regulator has not decided to implement it only on redemptions above Rs 2 lakh from the scheme.

To begin with, the swing pricing framework will be made applicable only for scenarios related to net outflows from the schemes.

“This mechanism will reduce the impact of large outflows on the remaining investors. It will help increase confidence in debt funds,” said the CEO at a domestic fund house.

The mechanism will be a hybrid framework with a partial swing during normal times and a mandatory full swing during volatile times for high-risk open-ended debt schemes.

“All AMCs shall make clear disclosures along with illustrations in the SIDs including information on how the swing pricing framework works, under which circumstances it is triggered and the effect on the NAV for incoming and outgoing investors,” said the circular.

For the purpose of determining market dislocation, AMFI shall develop a set of guidelines as part of recommendations to SEBI. The regulator will decide whether to accept the suggestions or not.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Zerodha gets Sebi’s approval to set up an AMC, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Zerodha has received a licence from capital markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), to set up an Asset Management Company (AMC).

The in-principle approval from Sebi will allow the Bengaluru-based startup to launch its own mutual funds, founder and chief executive Nithin Kamath tweeted on Wednesday.

Zerodha is India’s largest retail broker by registered users.

“So, we just got an in-principle approval for our AMC (MF) license. I guess now comes the hard part (sic),” Kamath tweeted.

Zerodha had applied to the capital market regulator in February 2020, just months after Sebi allowed fintech firms to enter the MF business.

A spokesperson for Zerodha did not offer comment.

Flipkart cofounder Sachin Bansal’s fintech venture Navi has also received regulatory approval to launch its own AMC.

In December 2019, Sebi eased regulations for fintech startups planning to enter the MF industry. It said entities with a net worth of Rs 100 crore and five years of being profitable were eligible to sponsor MFs.

AMCs should also maintain their minimum net worth continuously and not only towards the end of the year.

Earlier, entrants needed to have five years of experience in the financial services business and demonstrate three years of profitability, as well as maintain a net worth of Rs 50 crore.

“It’s a great move, no question. Zerodha had also applied for a licence, but Covid-19 slowed the market. We need more players to come to this market to foster innovation,” Kamath told ET in an interview in January, on Sebi’s relaxations.

“The entry barrier has stopped many (from entering the MF industry). The problem with mutual funds today is that they are very complex for retail investors. With newer players coming in, I think the products will become simpler and innovative,” Kamath had said.

The move comes at a time when Sebi has given approvals to firms such as Bajaj Finserv and discount broker Samco to launch MFs.

Navi recently applied to Sebi to launch as many as 10 new MFs, all of which are set to be passively managed. These funds mirror the performance of an underlying index and typically do not need a fund manager.

Zerodha has led the pack of new-age fintech brokers including Groww, Upstox and Paytm Money, which have seen strong traction on their platforms by retail investors as millions of Indians flocked to stock investments, attracted by the Nifty and the Sensex recording peaks repeatedly since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI to float At-1 bonds in domestic market, will mufual funds buy?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


After HDFC Bank and Axis Bank successfully raised Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bonds from overseas investors, the State Bank of India is set to test the local market this week with such bonds.

State Bank of India plans to raise up to Rs 4,000 crore selling AT-1 in the local market, first by a lender in this fiscal.

The At-1 market was almost dead after the Securities and Exchange Board of India earlier this year changed the valuation rules, which were partially rolled back later.

If the issue is successful, other lenders may tap the local market rather than the overseas market.

HDFC Bank and Axis Bank have eschewed the local market this year raising funds via the AT1 route in the overseas market.

SBI bonds

SBI bonds are expected to be up for bidding on Wednesday on the electronic debt bidding platform of stock exchanges. The bonds may offer between 7.90% and 8.10% with a five-year call option, which allows investors an exit route.

AT1, or perpetual bonds, do not have any fixed maturity.

The bonds are compliant with Basel-III, an international capital standard.

SBI Capital Markets is helping the bank raise the money. It has reached out to several local investors including private banks, corporate treasuries, bond houses, retirement bodies, wealth managers and insurers.

AT1 bonds are billed as quasi-equity securities that bear a higher risk of capital losses. These are generally rated three-to-four notches lower than an issuer’s corporate credit rating.

Local rating firms Crisil and India Ratings have graded the SBI’s paper AAplus with a stable outlook.

The mutual fund position

Mutual funds, which once used to buy heavily in AT1 bonds, are lukewarm about this asset class after the banking regulator last year ordered that these instruments be written off in Yes Bank’s state-sponsored bailout. Also, on March 10, Sebi had ordered mutual funds to cap ownership of bonds with special features at 10% of the assets of a scheme and value them as 100-year instruments from next month, potentially triggering a redemption wave. Later, the capital markets regulator eased valuation rules but with some riders after the finance ministry asked it to withdraw the directive to mutual funds.

The muted response by MFs had prompted the lenders to tap the overseas market

Perpetual bond sales by banks have nearly halved to Rs 18,772 crore in FY21 from Rs 34,860 crore three years earlier.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Zomato | Paytm | IPO: What new age tech IPOs mean for the brokerage industry, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Indian brokerage industry has had a very good run in the last one year with the stock market booming despite the ongoing Covid-19 crisis. The otherwise trying time saw the onset of two new strong trends in financial markets – the return of the retail investors and companies coming to the primary market with unprecedented force.

These two factors have kept the brokerage sector busy as well as thriving. On its part, broking companies improved their platforms to promote ease of trading with the adoption of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), lowered brokerage fees, and tweaked their offering to suit the needs of new investors.

All these efforts helped the brokerage industry bear fruits and be future ready for the trend that is to stay for a long term. Ratings agency CRISIL estimated broking revenue to have grown around 65-70% during the financial year 2020-21 as against about 7% growth to the previous fiscal. Although the revenue forecast seems dimmer for the current financial year and probably beyond, because of market and regulatory factors, there is no denying that the industry has entered one of its most exciting times.

Riding the IPO boom
What has also ushered in a phase of change for the industry is the launching of initial public offers (IPOs). According to PrimeDatabase, there were 69 public issues which raised Rs 74,707 crore in FY21 and so far, this fiscal, around 24 companies have raised as much as Rs 37,366 crore.

The stock market debut frenzy was triggered by food delivery app Zomato, which raised $1.3 billion from the primary market this year. The owners of fintech apps like Paytm are looking forward to the IPO. The $2 billion public issue is slated to be the largest IPO in India since the Coal India IPO in 2007.
Several other unicorns and interesting start-ups joining the fray include PolicyBazaar, MobiKwik Systems, Nykaa E-Retail, and Delhivery.

There are abundant instances when the IPO mania stretched beyond a point resulting in losses for the investors. Be it the IPO boom of 1992 or the one in 1999 or the IPO boom of 2006-08 which ended with the sub prime crisis.

Time for innovation
The IPO boom is expected to bring many more millennials to the stock market given the value they see in these services companies which are in insurance, food delivery, and ecommerce, things they use on an everyday basis. With the onset of the new-age investors, helped by increased internet penetration and disposable income, the brokerage industry will go through a sea change in terms of use of technology. Already, a new crop of brokerages such as Zerodha have been creating waves in the industry. Existing and traditional brokerage firms too have ensured that they are not left behind in upgrading themselves.

As the industry and its needs evolve, technological innovations will become all the more visible. The innovations will not be restricted to investors looking at the Indian market but also beyond into more matured and bigger markets in the West. Global investments will be another area that will keep brokerages on their toes in the year ahead.

Bumps that can be straightened out
There are opportunities for revenue growth and the brokerage industry is likely to face pressure from the new regulatory changes. Two key implementations that will impact revenue growth are the upfront margin requirement mandated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India from last year and the phased increase in peak margin requirements, which will go up to 100% by September 2021. So even if new client additions bring in more revenue, these requirements would dent full potential. If Sebi were to reconsider its decision on these policies, the brokerage industry would be able to ride high.

(The author, K K Maheshwari, is President at Association of National Exchanges Members of India (ANMI). The views are his own)



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

NSE directs its members to stop sale of digital gold by Sept 10, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: National Stock Exchange (NSE) has directed its members, including stockbrokers, to discontinue the sale of digital gold on their platforms by September 10. The direction came after capital markets regulator Sebi said that certain members are providing a platform to their clients for buying and selling digital gold.

Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), through a letter dated August 3, informed the exchange that the said activity is in contravention of Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules (SCRR), 1957, and the members should refrain from undertaking any such activities.

The SCRR rules restrict all members from engaging, either as principal or employee, in any business, other than that of securities or commodity derivatives, except as a broker or agent, not involving any personal financial liability.

Accordingly, NSE directed members not to carry out such activity and comply with the regulatory requirements at all times.

“Members, currently engaging in the activity, shall cease to undertake all activities in this regard, within one month from the date of this circular during which necessary communications, regarding the discontinuation, shall be made to the respective clients,” NSE said in a circular dated August 10.

TradeSmart Chairman Vijay Singhania said digital gold units are not issued by any regulated entity. There is no method to check whether the digital gold certificate is backed with physical gold or not.

Some jeweller firms like Titan and banks were known for selling digital gold.

Digital gold does not come under the definition of securities as defined in the Securities Contract (Regulations) Act 1956.

“The circular prohibits the dealing/offering digital gold-selling via Sebi registered entities, as it is not a security as mentioned above. It may be continued to be sold by the unregulated entities, subject to RBI directions if any,” Singhania said.

Kishore Narne, Head of Commodities & Currencies, Motilal Oswal Financial Services, said, “We were distributors of the digital gold product of MMTC-PAMP, with the backdrop of exchange issuing the directives for such product to be not sold by all stockbrokers of the stock exchange; we shall be discontinuing distribution of this product”.

According to him, MMTC-PAMP will continue to be the owner of the product and retain all the holdings of gold on behalf of clients and shall be offering all the redemption and sell-back options for all the existing clients.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bajaj Finserv gets Sebi nod to launch mutual fund business, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Bajaj Finserv said it has received an in-principle approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) for sponsoring a mutual fund. The Company has received an In-Principle approval from Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) vide their letter dated 23 August 2021, for sponsoring a Mutual Fund.

Accordingly, the company would be setting up an Asset Management Company and the Trustee Company, directly or indirectly i.e., itself or through its subsidiary in accordance with applicable SEBI Regulations and other applicable laws,” said the communication from Bajaj Finserv.

Bajaj Finserv Limited is a part of Bajaj Holdings & Investments Limited which focusses on lending, asset management, wealth management and insurance.

Earlier in August, online discount broker Samco Securities received capital markets regulator Sebi’s approval to launch its mutual fund business. All this comes after the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) allowed Fintechs to apply for mutual fund (MF) licenses, last year in December.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Groww, Upstox, Motilal Oswal to be hit by Sebi’s latest rules on digital gold sale, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has instructed all members, including stockbrokers and wealth managers, to wind down the sale of digital gold on their platforms by September 10.

This came after capital markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), flagged such sales as a breach of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules (SCRR), 1957.

The move, ahead of the crucial festive season months when Indian consumers typically become active purchasers, has hit the country’s nascent yet burgeoning digital gold industry.

Investors are worried over its future as well as its legitimacy in the eyes of financial sector regulators, Sebi as well as the Reserve Bank of India.

Sebi’s concerns may have stemmed from potential use of client funds by brokers to buy digital gold which it views as a non-broking business, according to a review of documents and discussions with multiple industry sources.

The lack of regulatory oversight on companies that sell and store physical gold corresponding to the virtual assets being allocated to the end-consumer, is also cause for concern.

“…It has, however, come to the notice of SEBI/Exchange that certain members are providing a platform to their clients for buying and selling of digital gold. SEBI vide a letter dated August 3 has informed the Exchange that the said activity is in contravention of Rule 8 (3) (f) of SCRR, and members should refrain from undertaking any such activities,” a circular issued by NSE on August 10 showed.

According to a source, similar notices have been issued by all leading exchanges in India in recent weeks. ET could not independently verify this.

New age fintech brokers such as Upstox, Groww, Paytm Money as well as traditional brokers such as HDFC Securities and Motilal Oswal offer customers an option to “invest” in digital gold.

These companies have been given time till September 10 to discontinue the product as well as inform consumers about the move, as per the circular, which ET has reviewed.

Uptsox, Groww, NSE and Sebi did not respond to ET’s emails. Spokespersons for Paytm Money and HDFC Securities declined to comment.

The sale of digital gold in India, although a new concept, is “nothing but facilitating the purchase and sale of physical gold through a digital medium, and the ability to hold it digitally,” said Kishore Narne, head of commodities and currencies at Motilal Oswal.

“We understand Sebi’s concerns as it doesn’t fall under its scope of regulation, they have asked all Sebi-regulated entities to refrain from offering such products, and we are honouring it,” Narne said, adding that customers already holding digital gold would not be impacted by the new rules.

The NSE move comes as a jolt to fintech startups that have been building business models around facilitating purchase and sale of gold virtually in partnership with metal and gold firms – Augmont Gold Ltd, MMTC-PAMP India and Digital Gold India.

The business model involves customers being allowed to buy gold for as low as one rupee, as a digital asset. The gold companies then store an equivalent amount of gold in their lockers – against a virtual certificate of purchase.

These companies, though not under the purview of any financial sector regulator, are said to have a self-regulatory audit and diligence mechanism.

The NSE circular is only applicable to members of the NSE, said Renisha Chainani, Head of Research, Augmont Gold.

“This circular has been issued pursuant to some clarifications put by the regulator, Sebi, on NSE members for offering digital gold. All such partners shall work within the framework and guidelines prescribed by Sebi from time to time,” said Chainani.

MMTC and Digital Gold India did not comment.

Non-broking platforms such as PhonePe and Google Pay among others also offer digital gold to customers and are unlikely to be affected by this development.

India’s digital gold market is worth about Rs 5,000 crore annually, according to industry insiders.

The number of users with over Rs 100 balance in digital gold could be in the range of 5-6 million, said Deepak Abbot, the cofounder of Indiagold, a gold loan fintech.

“This could be an early indication that the regulator is looking to come up with regulations for the industry. Currently, these transactions are not under the purview of either Sebi or RBI,” said Abbot.

A senior stock exchange official told ET that brokers cannot offer such unregulated products through their Sebi-registered entity or platform.

“All the listed products are settlement guaranteed and carry a different risk profile. If an investor loses money due to such digital gold, neither the regulator nor the exchanges can be held responsible,” the executive said. “Hence, our action is limited to the extent that you cannot use Sebi-licensed platforms to sell such products.”

A leading securities lawyer who represents the interests of several brokerages said digital gold typically falls in a regulatory grey zone currently and unless Sebi comes out with a set of regulations, brokers cannot sell the products.

“The problem seems to be that some of the fintech players offer digital gold on the same page right next to where they sell mutual funds or listed shares,” the lawyer said. “However, there is no bar on these fintech firms to create a separate legal entity and set up a different page to sell digital gold.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Sebi probed 94 new cases for flouting securities law in FY21, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: As many as 94 fresh cases pertaining to flouting of securities norms were taken up for investigation by Sebi in 2020-21, marking a decline of 42 per cent from the preceding financial year, as per the regulator’s latest annual report. The cases were related to alleged violation of securities law including market manipulation and price rigging.

“During 2020-21, 94 new cases were taken up for investigation and 140 cases completed in comparison to 161 new cases taken up and 170 cases completed in 2019-20,” the report noted.

Sebi said 43.6 per cent of the total cases taken up for investigation during 2020-21 were related to market manipulation and price rigging.

Besides, insider trading and takeover violations accounted for 31 per cent and over 3 per cent of the total cases, respectively. Over 21 per cent were related to other violations of securities laws.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) initiates investigation based on reference received from sources such as its integrated surveillance department, other operational departments and external government agencies.

“The purpose of the investigation is to gather evidence and to identify persons/ entities behind irregularities and violations so that appropriate and suitable regulatory action can be taken, wherever required,” the regulator noted in its annual report for 2020-21.

The steps involved during investigation process include an analysis of market data like order and trade log, transaction statements and exchange report.

Among others, Sebi also analysed bank records like account statements and KYC details, information about a firm, call data records and information obtained from market intermediaries during the investigation process.

After completion of an investigation, the watchdog said, penal action was initiated wherever violations of securities laws and obligations relating to securities market were observed.

During 2020-21, the regulator initiated enforcement action in 225 cases, while it disposed of 125 cases. At the end of March 2021, 476 cases were pending for action.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 2