One is to disallow commodity exchanges from having different transaction charges for different brokers. In securities, irrespective of volumes, the charges are similar for all brokers. However, the FMC has allowed exchanges to have different transaction charges for deliverable commodities.
An official said, “We have allowed freedom to exchanges to have different charges for commodities where they have to establish different mechanisms and set up infrastructure for delivery.”
In the case of agricultural commodities, more deliveries take place. However, in base metals and energy, cash settlements take place. Hence, charges can be lowered.
Some exchanges have requested the FMC for this. But the Multi Commodity Exchange, where most volumes come from metals and energy, stands to lose.
“The move is to ensure a level-playing among exchanges,” said the official.
The FMC had said it may allow shareholders of exchanges with less than two per cent shareholding to trade on those. However, now it is considering allowing all shareholders to trade on the same exchange, given the shareholder is not on its board.
The FMC, said the source, is considering widening position limits for participants. This could improve hedging and bring higher volumes. The risk management group set up by the FMC had recommended this.