SEBI Finds BofA Leaked Confidential Info on $180M Block Trade: Report

India's market regulator SEBI has found that a Bank of America unit improperly shared confidential information about a $180 million block sale of Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC shares. The regulator alleges the bank's deal team disclosed price-sensitive details to employees outside the execution team and later provided inaccurate statements to investigators. Bank of America is reportedly preparing a response and may seek a settlement without admitting wrongdoing. The case highlights ongoing regulatory scrutiny over information leaks in capital markets transactions.

Key Points: SEBI Finds BofA Leaked Info on $180M Block Trade

  • SEBI issues show-cause notice to BofA
  • Alleged leak of $180M Aditya Birla block trade info
  • Bank accused of misleading investigators
  • BofA may seek multi-million dollar settlement
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SEBI 'finds' confidential information leak from BofA on 2024 block trade: Report

SEBI alleges Bank of America unit leaked confidential info on a $180M Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC share sale and misled investigators, reports WSJ.

"The regulator also allegedly faulted the bank for lacking adequate safeguards to prevent leaks of confidential capital‑markets transactions. - Wall Street Journal"

New Delhi, Jan 8

Capital markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India has found that a Bank of America unit improperly shared material non‑public information about a $180 million block sale and misled investigators, a report has claimed.

SEBI's November show‑cause notice alleges the bank's deal team disclosed price‑sensitive details of a 2024 sale of Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC shares to employees outside the execution team and later provided inaccurate statements to investigators, the report from the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.

The regulator also allegedly faulted the bank for lacking adequate safeguards to prevent leaks of confidential capital‑markets transactions. Bank of America is preparing a response to SEBI's accusations and is expected to seek a multi‑million‑dollar settlement without admitting or denying wrongdoing, it said.

Sharing non‑public information ahead of announcements is illegal in India and several other markets as privileged parties to such information can profit from expected price moves. The bank corrected its earlier account to SEBI and produced records showing communications between non‑deal team staff and investors, the report noted.

Bank of America and SEBI did not immediately respond to the report.

The Wall Street Journal had reported a whistleblower complaint alleging the leak in 2024, but a spokesperson of the bank then denied allegations, saying it found no evidence to support the claims.

In November 2023, the Reserve Bank of India had imposed fines on Bank of America under the powers vested in it through sections of the FEMA.

Bank of America had been imposed a penalty for violating instructions on reporting requirements under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme of FEMA 1999.

Market regulator in September had imposed a penalty of Rs 2 lakh on Rahul Sharma, CEO of Swan LNG and designated person of Swan Corp (formerly Swan Energy Limited), for insider trading violations.

SEBI's investigation found that Sharma carried out trades and contra-trades in Swan Corp shares between September 1 and November 30, 2023, earning unlawful gains of Rs 30.25 lakh.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
First the RBI fine for FEMA violations, now this. Seems like a pattern of non-compliance. Regular investors like us follow all rules, but these big players think they can play fast and loose. Kudos to SEBI for investigating, but the penalty needs to be meaningful.
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David E
Working in finance in Mumbai, I see how crucial Chinese walls are. "Lacking adequate safeguards" is a serious charge. This isn't just about one trade; it's about the integrity of the entire block deal process. Other banks should review their internal controls immediately.
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Shreya B
The part about them misleading investigators is worse than the leak itself. If you make a mistake, own up to it. Trying to cover it up shows a complete disregard for Indian regulations. Hope SEBI doesn't let them settle quietly.
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Rahul R
This is why retail investors often feel the game is rigged. Big institutions get privileged information while we're left guessing. SEBI has been active lately (like in the Swan Energy case), which is good. Need consistent enforcement across the board, foreign and domestic.
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Michael C
A respectful criticism: While SEBI's investigation is commendable, the process feels slow. The block trade was in 2024, we're now in 2025. Swift, transparent action would be a stronger deterrent. Also, the reported "multi-million-dollar settlement" might just be a cost of doing business for them.

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