
MUMBAI, March 26: The biggest merit of the Bombay Stock Exchange8217;s BSE series of counter allegations against the Securities and Exchange Board of India SEBI is the cleansing effect it has had on the system. BSE8217;s allegations make several first time revelations several of which have been published exclusively by The Indian Express over the last five months and expose the mind-set of the BSE office bearers to the very concept of capital market regulations. Here is a look at some key issues.
Eight months after the BSE hushed up the huge settlement problem of June 1998, sacked BSE President J C Parekh and the executive director RC Mathur, in their various media utterances have for the first time confessed that the payment problem amounted to a whopping Rs 1000 crore. In fact, one paper even puts it at Rs 1000 crore in each of the two settlements where brokers faced a payment problem.
Curiously, SEBI sources insist that this figure is a gross exaggeration and the default, had it not been hushedup would have been far smaller. As against this, the grossly inadequate Trade Guarantee Fund TGF was under Rs 300 crore. This position has to be juxtaposed with that of the professionally run National Stock Exchange NSE for a clear indication of the BSE8217;s failure in controlling its brokers the NSE has a TGF of over Rs 400 crore, it declared six brokers defaulters during the same crises and its problem, even after the declaration was a mere Rs 27 crore.
R C Mathur, says that thePresident J C Parekh and ex-vice president Rajendra Banthia forced him to permit shares to be accepted as delivery. In fact, the BSE bye-laws, written during the days of the powerful Chairman Jeejeebhoy, give the Executive Directors powers equal to the entire governing board and the freedom not to be coerced into a wrong action.
Mathur only makes a strong case for the finance ministry to change the rules and install professional managers on all stock exchanges. Clearly brokers on the governing board, wield enough clout to browbeat administration officials, and the ministry needs to look into this issue urgently. In fact, several senior officials of the BSE will testify to constant interference by broker directors in their surveillance and investigation duties.
Lax SEBI regulation is evident from the fact that Rajendra Banthia, a close associate of Harshad Mehta, was not only allowed to be an office bearer for nearly three years first as treasurer and later as vice president, but actively influencedall market decisions. While it is true that Banthia was a duly elected office bearer, a strong regulator could have easily influenced the stock exchange to keep him away. Instead, Banthia, who has now replied to SEBI8217;s show-cause notice with harsh counter allegations, was virtually running the stock exchange until he was asked to step down after the payment crises.
The finance ministry has the opportunity to initiate sensible changes in stock exchange administration across the country, because the BSE president intends to seek redressal from the Appellate Authority. The ministry should note that the BSE Executive Director has virtually admitted his inability to manage the demands of members or regulate their excessive trading when he says that he sought guidance from the SEBI, which was not forthcoming.