|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, December 05, 2000 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Business
| Previous
| Next
Tech for small investors' benefit: SEBI on right track
By C. R. L. Narasimhan
Certain recent proposals of the Securities and Exchange Board of
India should benefit the small investors and hence have a healthy
impact on the capital market development.
The more important of those announced recently by Mr. S. S.
Tarapore who now heads the Secondary Market Advisory Committee of
the SEBI are (a) abolition of the non-delivery period for
dematerialised shares of companies specifically at the time of
dividend payment and bonus shares; (b) Reduction in period
between two book closures from the current requirement of 90 days
to 30 days; (c) Companies should make public within 15 minutes
material decisions after the conclusion of the board meetings.
These material decisions would be those pertaining to say
dividends, bonus or rights; and (d) With a view to ensuring a
minimum float in the listed shares detailed guidelines are to be
issued.
The above decisions will take effect soon. On the face of it,
they are no more than technical matters concerning company
secretaries and the like. On a closer examination, however, they
represent a big regulatory step forward in protecting small
investors. As Mr. Tarapore has remarked, small investors are the
bedrock of the capital market. However, despite substantial
progress made in protecting them, the universal perception is
that the small investors in today's capital market are a
neglected lot. In other words, the substantial initiatives taken
by the SEBI in the first phase of capital market reform, the
ordinary investors have not benefited in a tangible way.
Consequently, many of them have stayed away. Ample evidence
exists to prove that ordinary investors' desertion has harmed the
larger interests of the capital market, both in its primary and
secondary sub-segments.
The primary market's moribund state is directly attributable to
the ordinary investors' apathy which even concerted SEBI efforts
have been unable to shake off. The point is that the inherent
weaknesses of the secondary stock market apparatus as seen by the
frequent price manipulation and a whole lot of negative features
have made small investors wary of the stock market route for
their savings. Official policy has acknowledged this phenomenon.
Note for instance the advice given to ordinary investors to take
the mutual fund route rather than invest directly. This, on top
of the attractive tax concessions, which mutual funds enjoy,
seems to suggest that ordinary investors should not deal in
stocks directly. It would be a sad day, however, if individual
investors are discouraged from participating directly.
It is in such a context that the latest - seemingly technical -
SEBI initiatives are to be appreciated. They have to be clarified
and in course of time further refined. Take the well thought out
initiative on doing away with the no-delivery period for
dividends and bonus issues. When demat has taken hold there is
obviously a need to relook at concepts such as a no-delivery
period which were useful when physical scrips alone were
transacted. Tangible gains from the move are (a) investors will
reap immediately the benefits of corporate action involving
dividend and bonus announcements; (b) Speculation will be reined
in to a large extent. SEBI, which is considering the inclusion of
rights announcements as well, should move fast and include stock-
splits decisions too within the ambit of this move.
Evidently technology absorption has made the above possible.
Further evidence lies in the decision to drastically prune the
gap between two book-closures from 90 to 30 days. In course of
time it should be possible to reduce it further. The ideal
situation would be to operate on a record date concept alone.
To the extent stock speculators are denied the opportunity to
arbitrage on say ex-bonus, cum-bonus and so on, the small
investors gain. Similarly, the moves to force the companies to
disclose share price-sensitive information within 15 minutes
after the board meetings are also welcome.
Except that it is good to remember that reforms of this genre
will succeed only if they are capable of being monitored and for
that more and more dependence on technology becomes inevitable.
In a different genre, but equally significant, is the other
important recommendation to ensure a minimum float in a quoted
share.
At present there are specific guidelines on these when the
company makes the first public offer: media, technology and
infrastructure companies should offer at least 10 per cent of the
offer at the time of the public issue and the others 25 per cent.
Post-issue, however, these are not applicable.
Consequently, there are many scrips especially in the technology
sector which are held in a concentrated fashion by very few
investors. Erratic price fluctuations to benefit those few become
the norm. The SEBI proposes to give some of these companies a
year's grace period to comply with the new regulation. This move
is laudable. It is actually a throw back to the time when listing
requirements of the stock exchanges ensured a widespread
dispersal of share holding.
All in all these are steps in the right direction. At long last
the small investors' interests are focussed upon, not just
technology for its own sake.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Business Previous : Initial gains not fully held on BSE Next : Pentasoft's products on rental basis | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2000 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|