SEBI to issue directions on
derivatives contracts expiry this month
The Securities and Exchange Board of
India will issue directions this month over expiry of equity derivatives
contracts after analysing the comments on the consultation paper, its chairman
Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Thursday.
In a consultation paper issued in March,
SEBI proposed that the expiries of all equity derivatives contracts across
exchanges be uniformly limited to either Tuesdays or Thursdays. This would help
optimize the spacing between expiries and avoid designating either the first or
last day of the week as the expiry day.
Talking to reporters, Pandey said,
"Right now, whatever framework is there, we will be issuing a
post-consultation paper and we will be analysing the comments. The committees
have met and soon we will be issuing a clarification within this month".
When asked whether expiries will be
shifted to Tuesday or Thursday, he said "Those days are fixed now. No
change in the current thing but changes further".
It also proposed that exchanges should
seek SEBI's approval before launching or modifying any contract expiry or
settlement day.
"Every exchange will continue to be
allowed one weekly benchmark index options contract, on their chosen day
(Tuesday or Thursday)," the regulator had proposed.
Following the consultation paper, the National
Stock Exchange (NSE) has deferred its plan to change the expiry day of all
index and stock derivatives to Monday from Thursday until further notice.
The shift, which was scheduled to take
effect on April 4, 2025, would have seen all index and stock derivative
contracts move from Thursday to Monday.
To expand the product landscape and to
support the dynamic needs of the growing economy, Pandey said that SEBI has
granted in-principle approval for electricity derivatives, a potential tool to
hedge against the volatility in the energy sector.
Also, SEBI chief said the regulator aims
for optimum regulation and intends to remove redundant provisions.
"In the securities market
ecosystem, we are focussing on optimum regulation. We intend to simplify regulations,
remove redundant provisions and facilitate ease of compliance, while ensuring
high market integrity and robust investor protection. To achieve these
objectives, we need support from the industry as a trusted partner".
The regulator remains committed to
promoting ease of doing business in the securities market through regulatory
simplification, faster approvals, and technology-driven oversight.
"We are committed to a framework of
optimum regulation, one that ensures investor protection while allowing
businesses to innovate and thrive," Pandey said.
He also spoke about technology playing a
pivotal role in reshaping the capital markets and asked market participants to
proactively adopt technology-driven solutions to strengthen internal processes
and risk management frameworks.
On the regulatory front, technology is a
powerful enabler in strengthening surveillance, enhancing supervisory
effectiveness, and minimising market misconduct, he added.
www.thehindubusinessline.com,
dt. 23-05-2025