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Sebi revises fee for market intermediaries

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Press Trust of India Mumbai
To bolster financial resources of the capital markets regulator, Sebi today notified new norms that will make market intermediaries and corporates to pay higher fees to watchdog.

The revised fees structure is essentially will help in strengthening the investor awareness and education measures enlarging reach among investors through regional and new local offices.

It would also help in enhancing focus on capacity building and raising standards of supervision and enforcement function in the market place such as strengthening market surveillance and investigation function.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has revised the fees for mutual funds, stock exchanges, brokers as also for the listed and to-be-listed companies for filing of offer documents, rights issues and takeover.
 

"While revising the fees, care has been taken to ensure that the impact on retail investors is minimal," Sebi said.

The regulator will be periodically reviewing its fees structure downward or upward as the need arise.

As per the notification, the regulatory fee for exchanges having turnover in excess of Rs 10 lakh crore at "Rs 1 crore plus 0.00006 per cent on turnover in excess of Rs 10 lakh crore". The overall regulatory fee would be capped at Rs 20 crore.

Sebi said that mutual funds having average assets under management (AAUM) of up to Rs 10,000 crore will have to pay an "annual fee of Rs 0.0015 per cent of the AAUM." This is subject to a minimum of Rs 2.5 lakh and a maximum of Rs one crore.

For filing rights issue documents, a fee of Rs 50,000 would be charged for an issue size of up to Rs 10 crore, in case of an size of over Rs 10 crore, the company would have to pay an amount of 0.05 per cent of the issue size.

In case of a public issue of up to Rs 10 crore, the regulator would charge Rs one lakh, for the public issue of over Rs 10 crore and Rs 5,000 crore, 0.1 per cent of the issue size would be payable. Besides, public issue worth over Rs 5,000 crore, would attract a fee of Rs 5 crore plus 0.025 per cent of the issue size.

Sebi said that a fee of 0.0025 per cent of issue size would be charged, in respect of every draft offer document filed by a lead merchant banker.

For stock brokers, a fee of Rs 20 per one crore of turnover would be charged.

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First Published: May 23 2014 | 8:37 PM IST

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