SEBI board likely to relax carry-forward rules
Kevin James in New Delhi
The Securities and Exchange Board of India is meeting next week
to discuss a proposal for a major relaxation in the existing carry-forward
system to make it practical and acceptable to market participants.
Among the stipulations where the market watchdog body is planning
relaxation are cut in margin, daily reporting norms and more flexibility
in carry-forward transactions, according to SEBI sources.
According to finance ministry sources, revival of the carry-forward
system is expected to be a major item in the proposed package
which Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda promised the industry captains
on December 31, 1996.
The prime minister is expected to announce the package by the
end of this month.
The ministry sources said the package will be mainly aimed at
reviving the capital market and thus easing the liquidity problem
for the corporate sector.
The package will contain some long-term measures not only to boost
the market sentiments but to sustain it also, a senior ministry
official said.
A decision on avoiding double taxation on dividends is also expected
to be in the proposed package.
Concurrently, the industry ministry is also planning to announce
a detailed guideline for approval of foreign direct investment
proposals by end of January. The ministry, which is expected to
announce the guidelines this week, has postponed it to time it
with the PM's package, it is reliably learnt.
Liquidity problem and a transparent FDI approval systems were
among the major demands of the industry.
According to SEBI sources, the other areas where SEBI is likely
to make a relaxation are on the limit on carry-forward transactions
by brokers out of the total transactions in a day.
Domestic stock exchanges and the investing community have also
been persistently demanding revival of the carry-forward system.
Last week Bombay Stock Exchange President M G Damani wrote a letter
to SEBI Chairman D R Mehta for reviewing the present carry forward
system, which have failed to take off at the stock exchange ever
since introduction in January last year.
Although SEBI has assured to revise the carry-forward system in
three months time when it was introduced in January 1996, it has
been hesitant to do so until now.
Sources said that both the finance ministry and SEBI are now convinced
of the need for an effective forward trading system which is generally
accepted in financial markets as an essential ingredient for creating
an efficient market and for performing the function of price discovery.
It also helps investors to take a long view of the market based
on their expectations on future course of the economy and corporate
performance.
A major criticism about the revised carry-forward system is that
it is too rapid for investors to take a long-term view of the
market and corporations.
UNI
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