SEBI Proposes Unified Trading Rulebook to Cut Compliance Burden

SEBI has proposed a comprehensive overhaul to consolidate trading-related rules at stock exchanges. The regulator recommends 54 changes, including merging provisions for bulk and block deal disclosures and shifting dissemination to the client PAN level. The changes aim to simplify regulations, remove redundancy, and reduce the compliance burden. The move aligns with the government's broader goal of promoting ease of doing business in the financial sector.

Key Points: SEBI Proposes Unified Trading Rulebook, Eases Compliance

  • Merges overlapping trading & disclosure rules
  • Proposes 54 changes for simplification
  • Aims to reduce manual reporting by brokers
  • Shifts to promote ease of doing business
2 min read

SEBI proposes unified trading rulebook to simplify rules, cuts compliance burden

SEBI proposes merging 54 trading rules into a single framework to simplify regulations, reduce redundancy, and ease the compliance burden for market participants.

"Disclosure related provisions for bulk deals and block deals may be merged together. - SEBI statement"

Mumbai, Jan 10

Markets regulator Securities and Exchanges Board of India has proposed a comprehensive overhaul of trading‑related rules at stock exchanges to consolidate overlapping provisions and ease compliance for market participants.

The consultation paper recommended merging overlapping provisions on trading, price bands, circuit breakers, bulk and block deal disclosures, call auctions and liquidity enhancement schemes, according to an official statement.

The regulator proposed a total of 54 changes which include merging rules covering both equity and commodity segments into a single framework. The merging involves provisions on margin trading facility (MTF), unique client codes, PAN requirements, trading hours and daily price limits.

"Disclosure related provisions for bulk deals and block deals may be merged together. Further clarity may be provided on bulk deal disclosure, i.e. bulk deal information be disseminated by exchanges at client level (i.e. at PAN level) executed across members," the statement said.

Provisions applicable to clearing corporations should be separated into a dedicated master circular to avoid regulatory overlap, the regulator said.

"Penalty levied by Exchanges and Clearing Corporations should be uniform for modification of client codes and OTR allocations," the statement added.

It proposed merging bulk and block deal disclosures and shifting dissemination to the client PAN level instead of the UCC level to reduce manual reporting by brokers, and thereby improving transparency.

Presenting market‑wide circuit breaker rules, dynamic price band flexing, IPO price bands and call auction procedures in tabular form with duplicative operational examples removed were among the other revisions proposed.

Overall, the rules aim at simplification of regulatory requirements, removal of redundant provisions and discontinuation of duplication -- in order to promote ease of doing business (EODB) and reduce the compliance burden on exchanges.

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had earlier announced simplifying, easing and reducing cost of compliance for participants in the financial sector through a consultative process.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally! The compliance burden on small brokers is immense. Shifting bulk/block deal disclosures to PAN level instead of UCC will reduce so much manual work and errors. Hope this gets implemented quickly. More transparency is always welcome.
R
Rohit P
Good initiative, but the proof will be in the execution. SEBI has a habit of making rules more complex in the name of simplification. I hope this 'unified rulebook' doesn't become another 500-page document that nobody reads. Let's wait and see the final draft.
S
Sarah B
Merging equity and commodity rules makes perfect sense. It's about time our regulatory frameworks caught up with how integrated modern markets are. This should help fund managers and institutions operate more efficiently across segments.
V
Vikram M
Presenting circuit breakers and price bands in a table is a small but very useful change. Right now, you have to dig through multiple circulars. If this makes it easier for the common investor to understand the rules, it's a big win for market literacy.
K
Karthik V
Reducing compliance cost is key. So much broker manpower is spent just understanding and reporting under different rules. Freeing up that resource could lead to better customer service and innovation. Thumbs up from the industry side!

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