Market regulator the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) will probe whether a bear cartel triggered the sharp fall in the share price of electrical appliance maker Crompton Greaves by spreading rumours about the company.
The shares of Gautam Thapar-led Avantha Group company had tanked 14% in each of the past two trading sessions amid rumours of insider trading, but recovered some of the lost ground today.
The stock closed 2.5% up at Rs 181.30 on the BSE, after reaching 52-week low of Rs 171 yesterday.
The sharp fall on July 19-20 has come under the Sebi scanner as it coincided with widespread rumours of alleged violation of insider trading rules by the company's former chief Sudhir Trehan, sources said.
As neither the company, nor Trehan, prime-facie appear to have violated insider trading norms, the regulator suspects the role of some bear cartel in spreading the rumours to hit the share price, they added.
The rumours about Trehan having sold a significant amount of shares in the market in violation of rules began soon after the company posted a sharp fall of 58% in quarterly net profit on July 19, giving rise to the suspicion of some ulterior motives by a bear cartel, sources added.
More From This Section
However, Trehan had apparently sought prior permission for sale of his shares and the insider trading norms may not have been violated by him, sources added.
In a statement issued today, Crompton Greaves also clarified that Trehan demitted office on June 1 and the shares in question were bought by him 11 years ago.
"...He sold them to plan for his retirement. Due process was followed as per Sebi and Crompton Greaves' Insider Trading Regulations, pursuant to which, Trehan sought permission to sell his shares in the open trading window, which the company secretary gave," the company said in a statement.
"These shares were sold towards the end of June 2011 and on July 1, 2011 and the stock exchanges were duly informed as per the regulatory requirements," it added.
The company has not received any communication about any probe into insider trading rule violation from Sebi or the stock exchanges.
Sources said the probe was initial stage and would first focus on the entities having purchased and sold the shares in the past couple of days.
The bear cartels generally work on beating down the share price of a company to buy them at lower levels. At times, they also work at the behest of rivals.