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Sebi-RBI
meet on margin trading today
Our Markets Bureau
Mumbai, Sept 17: The Securities and Exchange Board
of India (Sebi) got into overdrive on Monday in a bid to revive
market sentiment and inject liquidity into the bourses.
Sebi said the Standing Technical Committee of Sebi and the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will meet Tuesday to discuss the
modalities of introducing margin trading on the Indian stock
exchanges. The market regulator has also asked stock exchanges
to submit to it detailed plans on when they intend to commence
trading in stock futures.
These decisions came after a day of hectic deliberations at
Sebi’s Mittal Court headquarters in south Mumbai. The Sebi
board had recently cleared 31 stocks in-principle for stock
futures trading.
The Sebi advisory group on derivatives, which met on Monday,
decided to have some essential pre-requisites like proper
risk containment measures and surveillance systems before
stock futures trading commences on the markets.
Prof JR Varma, of the advisory group, said individual stock
futures to be allowed on the derivatives segment would be
cash-settled and a majority of the risk containment measures
would be similar to those in existence for options in individual
stocks (OIS). These would then become delivery-settled after
three to four months. There would also have to be stricter
position limits imposed both at client/customer level and
trading member level. Position limits would be applied on
aggregate positions and controlled at trading member level
as well as client level, he said.
“The aggregate position of clients per broker should not exceed
5 per cent of the aggregate open position in the market or
1 per cent of the market capitalisation of the company initially,”
Prof Varma said.
The National Stock Exchange (NSE) and The Stock Exchange,
Mumbai (BSE) have told Sebi that they are in a position to
launch stock futures in a month’s time. Sebi chairman Devendra
Raj Mehta said after the Sebi board clears the exchanges’
proposals, trading can commence within four to six weeks.
The group also suggested that there were other steps which
also needed to be urgently taken up for the healthy growth
and development of the stock futures market, like equal access
and level playing field to all set categories of investors,
including foreign institutional investors (FIIs), mutual funds
and retail investors. These investors should be allowed to
trade in the derivatives market to add depth to the market.
At present, FIIs are allowed to participate in the derivatives
segment only in products like index futures and their exposure
limits are equivalent to their exposure in the cash segment
of the equities market.
The panel also discussed the proposal of margin trading submitted
by the Securities Industry Association, which is under incorporation.
Further clarifications were sought on the proposal and suggestions
on other models of margin trading were also considered. These
proposals would figure in Tuesday’s meeting of the Sebi-RBI
panel.
Mr Mehta said the panel is likely to deliberate on three options
for margin trading: either the funds should be routed through
the clearing corporations, or a special purpose vehicle should
be floated for margin trading by brokers or stock exchanges.
The third option, based on the US model, could be one where
50 per cent of the amount of the trade is paid by the client
and the rest is paid by the broker, who in turn borrows these
funds from high net-worth individuals or from banks.
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