The year began with Finance Minister P Chidambaram imposing 0.01 per cent commodity transaction tax (CTT) in Budget on non-agri products and processed food items, a development that did not go well with the industry.
The tax that came into force from July 1, affected the trading volume in 21 commodity futures exchanges including the two largest bourses MCX and NCDEX.
The Centre, which had issued a show-cause notice to the NSEL last year for running a forward contracts in violation of law, finally suspended trading at the spot exchange that unearthed a fraud of mammoth nearly Rs 5,600 crore -- even bigger than Harshad Mehta security market scam.
As many as 24 NSEL members (buyers) owe this amount to 13,000 investors with no stock in warehouses as collateral. So far, about Rs 265 crore has been paid to investors with NSEL defaulting for the 18th time in a row in its weekly payment.
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Nature and magnitude of scam was such that the Consumer Affairs Ministry did not have wherewithal to probe this matter and regulator Forward Market Commission (FMC) was transfered to the finance ministry for overseeing the enquiry.
Jignesh Shah, who was on a high at the start of this year with government's permission to start stock exchange, could not escape responsibility for this huge payment crisis and had to resign from two exchanges -- MCX and MCX-SX -- that he founded and nurtured.
At the fag end of the year, Shah received another jolt when FMC declared him and his firm FTIL unfit to run any exchange in the country.
Facing charge of being the 'highest beneficiary' in the scam, Shah has challenged this order in the Bombay High Court, which will hear the matter early next year.
"Investors confidence was at an all-time low in 2013," said a analysts with a major brokerage firm while referring to the adverse impact of NSEL scam and imposition of CTT.