Sebi revamps conflict-of-interest framework, eases FPI norms

India's markets regulator Sebi approved major changes to conflict-of-interest guidelines for its top officials and eased rules for foreign portfolio investors. The measures seek to standardize trading restrictions and enhance ease of doing business.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) approved a comprehensive overhaul of its conflict-of-interest guidelines during Monday's board meeting. The changes follow recommendations from a high-level committee (HLC) formed in March 2025 to review the framework for the chairperson and whole-time members (WTMs). This came amid past scrutiny from US firm Hindenburg Research, which accused former Sebi chairperson Madhabi Puri Buch of conflicts linked to Adani Group firms. Sebi employees, WTMs, and the chairperson are now barred from trading in equity and equity-related instruments, limited to mutual fund holdings. New investments in pooled vehicles are allowed only if managed by regulated intermediaries, Sebi Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey stated. New appointees must liquidate or freeze such investments, including in unlisted companies. Restrictions extend to family members, except for unlisted securities curbs. Top officials fall under the 'insider' definition for investments. Officials including the chair, WTMs, executive directors, and chief general managers must publicly disclose immovable assets, akin to Union government civil servants. A digital system will track conflict disclosures and recusals. For ease of business, FPIs can now net-settle outright cash market transactions (purchases or sales, not both), reducing funding costs, especially during index rebalances. The board also amended 'fit and proper' criteria for market intermediaries. In Mumbai, following HDFC Bank's non-executive chairman Atanu Chakraborty's resignation citing ethics concerns, Pandey emphasized independent directors' duties. 'Independent directors are expected to act responsibly,' he said. 'No one should make insinuations without proper evidence and recordings,' he added, noting systems exist to formally record concerns.

相关文章

Dramatic illustration of HDFC Bank Chairman Atanu Chakraborty's resignation amid ethics conflict, in a boardroom setting with symbolic elements.
AI 生成的图像

HDFC Bank Chairman Atanu Chakraborty Resigns Citing Values and Ethics Conflict

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

HDFC Bank's part-time chairman Atanu Chakraborty has resigned, citing internal practices that conflicted with his personal values and ethics. The Reserve Bank of India has approved Keki Mistry as interim chairman for three months. The departure follows Chakraborty's oversight of the major HDFC Bank-HDFC merger.

India's market regulator has sent a show cause notice to six Capital Group foreign portfolio investors over alleged breaches of trade confidentiality. The action follows claims that sensitive order details were shared improperly, enabling front-running activities.

由 AI 报道

Sebi Chairperson Tuhin Kanta Pandey has stressed a principle-driven and data-backed strategy to address excessive speculation in equity derivatives. He noted that regulatory measures aim at specific areas of speculation, particularly short-tenor index options, rather than the whole market. The goal is to maintain liquidity and ensure responsible market operations.

Following initial market shocks from West Asia conflict, Indian equities saw major foreign investor outflows and remain volatile amid rising oil prices. FPIs withdrew $751.4 million on March 2—the largest daily pullout in four months—with markets resuming post-Holi holiday on March 4 under continued pressure.

由 AI 报道

Two Indian companies have secured regulatory clearance to proceed with initial public offerings. Deepa Jewellers and Cotec Healthcare both obtained approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

HDFC Bank has engaged three law firms, including domestic and international ones, to investigate former chairman Atanu Chakraborty's sudden departure. The review will examine board meeting records and whistleblower complaints. The move seeks an objective assessment amid concerns over governance.

由 AI 报道

Domestic institutional investors raised their holdings in several large-cap Indian companies during the March 2026 quarter. Buying focused on financial, technology, telecom and industrial names even as share prices fell sharply.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝