SEBI working on framework for AI-based trading amid growing cyber threats: Tuhin Kanta Pandey
Bhubaneshwar, May 18
Securities and Exchange Board of India Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey on Monday said the market regulator will soon come out with guidelines for AI-driven trading, while cautioning that artificial intelligence presents both opportunities and heightened cyber risks for the financial ecosystem.
Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of an event organised by the Association of Mutual Funds in India in Odisha, Pandey said SEBI was working on a framework to regulate the growing use of AI in trading activities.
"For AI-driven trading, we are actually going for guidelines on that. On how AIs will, in future, do that. Now AI has an opportunity as well as a risk. The opportunity is that you can use the AI for several of your things which can be automated, but risks will come with the cyber risk. Cyber risk from AI has increased and we are now issuing an advisory on how the SEBI ecosystem, the regulated entities can be protected from that enhanced risk," Pandey told ANI.
He said AI was helping financial entities automate processes and expand multilingual investor outreach, but warned that increasing dependence on technology had also amplified vulnerabilities that could threaten market integrity.
"So as you know, everyone has a software and if certain cyber security is threatened, that means if vulnerabilities are found in the software, very, very quickly, there is a problem that we will be attacked and those attacks may be successful. Then that is bringing risk to the market integrity," Pandey told the media.
The SEBI Chairman also spoke about "Project Jagrook", an AI-enabled investor awareness initiative aimed at expanding investor engagement through a 360-degree, multi-agency and multimedia campaign. He stressed the need for aggressive patch management and stronger verification systems to secure software, including applications deployed through third-party vendors.
On foreign portfolio investor (FPI) outflows, Pandey termed such movements part of the normal global investment cycle and said overseas investors continuously assessed returns and macroeconomic conditions across markets.
"The FPI's come and go depending upon what they think about the relative situation between one country vis-a-vis another global jurisdiction. There are a number of factors which are contingent. 'What are the returns that the FPI's are getting in a particular market post?' It's a dollar return, not a rupee return, in a market, depending upon various factors like interest rates, arbitrage, the stance of the central banks," Pandey said.
Pandey also spoke about unauthorized deposit schemes, saying state governments had legislative powers to act against illegal collections through laws such as the Chit Fund Act, the Banning of Unauthorized Deposits Act and state-level legislations like the OPID Act in Odisha.
He urged asset management companies and local administrations to steer investors towards regulated financial products such as mutual funds, Portfolio Management Services and Alternative Investment Funds.
— ANI
Reader Comments
As someone working in finance, I agree with the cyber risk concern. But I hope SEBI's guidelines don't become another bureaucratic hurdle that kills innovation. Small startups are using AI to democratize trading access for rural investors. Need to balance regulation with encouragement. Also, "Project Jagrook" sounds promising - we really need more investor education in regional languages!
FPI outflows are normal - why does everyone panic? 😅 The chairman's explanation about dollar returns vs rupee returns makes perfect sense. SEBI should focus more on stopping those "double your money in 3 months" scam schemes that target uneducated people in tier-2 cities. AI trading guidelines are good, but first fix the basics.
Interesting to see SEBI taking proactive steps on AI regulation. In the US, the SEC is still debating this. The mention of "aggressive patch management" is crucial - many Indian financial firms run outdated software with known vulnerabilities. But will these guidelines apply to foreign algo-trading firms operating in India as well?
I'm a small mutual fund investor and I'm worried about AI trading bots manipulating markets. Remember the 2020 market crash? High-frequency trading algorithms made it worse. SEBI should also regulate the "pump and dump" AI groups on WhatsApp and Telegram. Retail investors are vulnerable to these new-age scams!
Good initiative but typical SEBI style - announce first, implement later. We need actual penalties for cyber breaches, not just advisories. And what about the data privacy of millions of Indians trading through Apps? The AI ecosystem will collect massive personal data. Hope
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.