FMC may give institutional investors more power in comex operations
The Forward Markets Commission (FMC),
the commodity markets regulator, is planning to institutionalise the
operations of commodity futures exchanges in the country. FMC has called
a meeting of all the institutional investors having one per cent or more equity holding in the commodity exchanges on Tuesday.
In this connection, the regulator on Wednesday wrote to all the six
commodity exchanges to provide a list of institutional investors and to
inform the latter about the meeting. While the FMC's communication to
the exchanges doesn't give more details, an FMC source said the
exchanges were public companies and their operations needed better
vigil.
Last week, the FMC had asked all bourses to ensure half the board directors be from institutional investors.
In the meeting with investors, the regulator could discuss its vision
about functioning of the exchanges and how their operations should be
supervised, sources said. These investors could be given more powers on
supervising capital expenditure, key appointments and other sensitive
functions of the exchanges.
FMC is also understood to have learnt a lesson from the National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL) crisis involving management-level fraud of Rs 5,572 crore.
According to FMC, the definition of institutional investors includes government companies as defined in the Companies Act
1956, banks and public financial institutions, co-operative societies
as defined in the Societies Act and Federations manufacturing or
marketing agri-inputs or marketing agri-produce or owning and operating
warehouses. Warehousing companies in the private sector having minimum
five years' standing in warehousing business and owning and operating
warehouses in at least two states also come under this category. Plus,
stock exchange and commodity exchanges have also been defined as
institutional investors.
Institutional investors in MCX,
the largest and the only listed exchange, had met the FMC in the past
to understand the impact of the measures the regulator was planning
after the NSEL fiasco. These investors had said they would also ensure
whether the exchange follows proper collateral management and other risk
management policies and proper corporate governance norms are followed
or not.
The complaint also alleges a massive conspiracy by the accused and
violations of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) involving criminal breach of
trust, forgery, criminal mis-appropriation of assets, cheating (sections
406, 407, 409, 417, 420, 424, 465, 467, 468, 471 r/w 120B of the IPC).
These offences are of utmost seriousness inviting seven years' rigorous
imprisonment if proven.
shane haider
pgdm 3rd
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