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Stocks, commodities to trade on single exchange from October 2018: Sebi

The union of stock and commodity bourse will help product cross-listing; move will allow bourses like NSE and BSE to launch commodity products.

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Press Trust of India Mumbai
In a major step towards a simpler securities market trading infrastructure, regulator Sebi today announced much-awaited integration of stocks and commodities trading on a single exchange from October next year.

A two-phase integration of trading in commodity derivatives market with other segments of securities market at the exchange level was discussed and approved by Sebi's board at a meeting here today, a move that would help leading stock exchanges, BSE and NSE, to launch their commodity trading platforms.

Currently, commodity derivatives are traded on separate exchanges, which include MCX and NCDEX.

After the meeting, Sebi's Chairman Ajay Tyagi told reporters that the integration process would involve removal of certain existing restrictions by amending the relevant securities market regulations with effect from October 1, 2018.

This would pave way for all exchanges -- currently providing trading platforms for stocks and commodity exchanges

-- to provide universal trading facilities.

This would allow all exchanges to do stocks as well as commodities trade from October 2018, Tyagi said.

Sebi has already been regulating the commodities derivative market after the merger of erstwhile FMC (Forward Markets Commission) with it.

In his budget for 2017-208, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had proposed that the commodities and securities derivative markets would be integrated further by integrating the participants, brokers and operational frameworks.

For smoother implementation of this budget announcement, Sebi had decided that the integration would be done in two phases.

The first phase involves integration at the intermediary level, while the second phase deals with enabling a single exchange to operate various segments such as equity, equity derivatives, commodity derivatives, currency derivatives, interest rate futures and debt instruments, among others.

Sebi said all necessary steps required for the first phase has been already taken by it.

In order to implement the second phase, that is to permit trading of commodity derivatives and other segments of the securities market on a single exchange, Sebi said its board today approved suitable amendments to existing regulations and these amendments would be effective from October 1, 2018.

"All exchanges will be able to do securities trades as well as commodities trade from October 1, 2018. As you are aware when FMC was merged with Sebi in September 2015 there were different timelines for different items.

"Going by these timelines we could see that October 2018 perhaps is the right time where it would be three years after Sebi-FMC merger that all exchanges are able to deal with commodities or securities. This has been approved by the board," the Sebi chairman said.

Products will have to be introduced with approval of Sebi and detailed guidelines will come out in consultation with all stake holders, he said.

"At the brokers level we have already brought in the synergy what was required was to bring in synergy at exchange level so from October 1 they would be eligible to deal with all products subject to stipulation and guidelines so that these guidelines would be worked out in coming months."

When asked if it would lead to consolidation, he said that might or may not happen.

"Sebi is looking at it from point of view of securities market. The concept is that there is single regulator at the highest level and we are looking at it from clients point of view and investor point of view to bring in the synergy."

Separately, Sebi's board also approved a proposal on payment of fees by stock brokers trading in "Options" segment of commodity derivatives.

"On introduction of Options contract in commodity derivatives, the Sebi board has decided to amend the SEBI (Stock Brokers and Sub Brokers) Regulations, 1992, such that the manner of calculation of turnover fees for Options contracts in commodity derivatives shall be computed the same way as computed for Options contract in equity derivatives," the regulator said.

Sebi board meeting announcements in a nutshell 
 

New framework for credit rating agencies

* Net worth increased by 5x to Rs 25 cr

* Cross-holding cap of 10% on non-institutional investors

Tweak in shareholding structure for MFs

* Sponsor can hold above 10% in only one fund house

* Move to impact UTI MF, whose sponsor own more than one MF

Leeway for India Inc on shareholding norms

* Dilution now permitted through QIP and block deals

* However, maximum of 2% can be diluted through this route

FPI norms eased

* Broad-basing, KYC, fit and proper criteria eased

* Move to offset tightening of P-note norms

Universal exchanges allowed

* Exchanges allowed launch equity, currency and commodity derivatives trading

* New rules to be applicable from Oct 2018; NSE, BSE, MCX to benefit

Other measures

* Investment threshold for REITs ease to 50%

* Allows trading in security receipts issued by ARCs

* Issue of refund, allotment orders allowed in electronic mode

* New consultation paper on investment advisers

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Topics : Sebi

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First Published: Dec 28 2017 | 5:55 PM IST

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