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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, March 10, 2001 |
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Broker-run exchanges, main cause for the imbroglio
By Oommen A. Ninan
MUMBAI, MARCH 9. The recent developments in the capital market
bring into sharp focus the urgency of preventing brokers from
running the stock markets. The Government and the Securities and
Exchange Board of India (SEBI) should speed up the
demutualisation or corporatisation of the broker-driven stock
exchanges, according to knowledgeable market observers.
``We have moved the Government for the demutualisation of
exchanges which will involve some legal issues and the Government
is examining them,'' said Mr. D. R. Mehta, Chairman, SEBI. He
feels the brokers should not be allowed to run the stock
exchanges as there is a moral conflict of interest. He said the
Bombay Stock Exchange could adopt one of several models - at the
New York Stock Exchange the president is a non-broker, in some
exchanges 50 per cent of the governing body are non-brokers and
there is the National Stock Exchange pattern where professionals
run the exchange.
One of the major issues that the market regulator is inquiring
into at present is whether the BSE followed the norm that the
surveillance of market operations was handled only by the
Executive Director. Earlier SEBI had issued detailed guidelines
on this matter and emphasised that surveillance should be handled
only by executive directors.
The latest crisis shows how the markets can be manipulated with
brokers conducting the stock exchange's day-to-day affairs. They
are both participants and regulators and this is the crux of the
issue. This is not a situation that has emerged all of a sudden,
it has been there for several years. One Executive Director of
BSE who controlled all aspects of the exchange effectively was
Mr. M.R. Mayya. After his retirement none of his successors was
able to take control of the exchange as the presidents always
overshadowed them.
Till 1994, equity markets in the country were dominated by the
BSE. A major policy initiative by SEBI in 1993 that all exchanges
should move over to screen-based trading - a decision motivated
by considerations of transparency - was first reflected in the
establishment of the National Stock Exchange in 1994 which is run
by professionals. Later the nation-wide response received for NSE
forced the BSE, Asia's oldest stock exchange, to adopt the screen
based trading system from March 1995.
Numerous payment crises have occurred in recent years on Indian
stock exchanges. Since the reform process began, the BSE was
plagued with malpractices which involved member brokers. First,
it witnessed the securities scam and then followed a series of
payment crises. In April 1995, immediately after introducing
screen based trading, the market witnessed in the context of M.
S. Shoes, a default involving a total exposure of Rs. 18 crores
which led to a payment crisis on the BSE. The issue brought the
functioning of the premier exchange to a halt for three days. The
late Nineties saw the same Harshad Mehta of the 1992 securities
scam moving share prices indirectly. This culminated in the price
rigging of shares of BPL, Sterlite and Videocon in June 1998.
Mr. J. C. Parekh, the then president of BSE, along with its vice-
president and executive director Mr. R. C. Mathur, had to resign
after SEBI initiated an enquiry into the price rigging episode.
Even though SEBI debarred several brokers from market operations
for varying periods for their involvement in the price rigging
case, the issue has remained inconclusive and no action has been
taken against the entities involved even after three years.
Mr. Anand Rathi's resignation from the presidentship of BSE on
Thursday comes in the wake of allegations of his involvement in
the unnatural rise and fall of the benchmark Sensex, specially
two days after the Budget. He was under fire from several
quarters following the March 2 crash of the index by 176 points
after a rise of 177 points on budget day. Now there are reports
that several governing board members of the BSE also were
involved in the episode.
Those closely watching the stock markets, especially the BSE,
point out that the members' interests always clash with the
regulation and administration of the exchange. The need of the
hour is to separate the ownership rights and trading rights.
The BSE apparently has some legal problems. An Act of Parliament
can facilitate the demutualisation process. The BSE is an
association of persons and it should be converted into a company.
In case of conversion there may be issues related to capital
gains, stamp duty and Companies Act. So the BSE is saying that it
should have a Demutualisation Act which would address all these
issues.
``Our view has been that demutualisation is desirable and we
recommended to the Government that the legal impediments should
be removed,'' said Prof. J.R. Varma, full time member of SEBI
Board. In other countries also, demutualisation took place under
separate statutes or an Act of Parliament. ``Our view is clear
that we are in favour of demutualisation at the earliest as it
gives greater flexibility for the exchanges,'' he added.
In the current set up, brokers own the exchange and elect the
governing board that runs the affairs of the exchange. Once the
ownership rights and trading rights get separated a broker will
be able to sell his ownership right while retaining his trading
right. Once this happens it will be the owners who will elect the
board and the owners need not be the same brokers.
However, demutualisation alone may not solve all the problems
that broker-driven exchanges are facing, but it will definitely
bring in the much needed transparency, Prof. Verma said.
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