SEBI bans Patel Wealth Advisors, directors for order spoofing

IANS April 28, 2025 287 views

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has taken decisive action against Patel Wealth Advisors for systematic market manipulation. The stockbroker was found guilty of order spoofing, a complex fraudulent trading technique designed to mislead investors and profit from artificial price movements. SEBI has banned the firm and its four directors, recovering ₹3.22 crore in illegal gains from their operations. The investigation revealed an unprecedented scale of market manipulation across 173 stocks over three years, signaling SEBI's commitment to market integrity.

"Order spoofing is a manipulative, fraudulent and unfair trade practice" - Kamlesh Varshney, SEBI Whole-Time Member
SEBI bans Patel Wealth Advisors, directors for order spoofing
Mumbai, April 28: The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Monday took strict action against stockbroker Patel Wealth Advisors (PWA) and its four directors for their involvement in illegal trading practices.

Key Points

1

SEBI uncovers largest order spoofing operation in Indian market history

2

Broker manipulated 173 stocks across 292 trading days

3

Regulator develops new techniques to detect complex market manipulations

The market regulator barred them from dealing in the securities market and ordered the recovery of Rs 3.22 crore in illegal gains.

SEBI found that PWA was involved in ‘order spoofing’, a fraudulent method where large buying or selling orders are placed with the intention to cancel them before execution.

Meanwhile, trades are made on the opposite side to take advantage of price movements triggered by those false orders.

In its interim order issued on Monday, SEBI explained that although order spoofing had been spotted earlier on a smaller scale in India, this was the first time such a large and widespread operation was uncovered.

SEBI’s whole-time member Kamlesh Varshney said that PWA’s actions misled other investors and disturbed the fair functioning of the market.

He emphasised that continuing such practices would harm investors’ interests and damage trust in the stock market.

“Order spoofing is a manipulative, fraudulent and unfair trade practice employed by PWA to deceive other market participants and profit from price fluctuation they induced on unwary investors in the market. This practice distorted market prices and undermined market efficiency,” Varshney mentioned.

The investigation showed that PWA’s spoofing activities happened in both the cash and derivatives segments over a period of three years, between January 2021 and January 2025.

According to SEBI’s findings, PWA manipulated 173 stocks across 292 trading days, sometimes multiple times in a single day. In total, they carried out 621 unique spoofing instances.

The manipulation involved placing large fake orders far from the current market price to create a false sense of demand or supply.

Once the prices moved in their favour, PWA quickly executed trades on the opposite side and later canceled the large fake orders, making wrongful profits.

The regulator also highlighted that despite repeated warnings and proceedings from the National Stock Exchange (NSE), PWA continued with unfair trading practices.

SEBI mentioned that it has now developed new techniques to detect such complex manipulations in the market. It also said that a detailed investigation will follow.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is why I've always been skeptical about small brokers. SEBI needs to keep cracking down on these manipulative practices. Good job catching them! 👏
P
Priya M.
As someone who lost money in the markets recently, this makes me wonder if my losses were due to such manipulations. SEBI should compensate affected investors too.
A
Amit S.
The scale is shocking - 3 years of manipulation across 173 stocks! How did it take so long to detect? SEBI's surveillance needs to be more proactive, not just reactive.
N
Neha T.
Finally some action! I've seen suspicious order patterns many times but never knew what to do about it. Maybe SEBI should create a whistleblower portal for retail investors to report such activities.
S
Sanjay P.
The Rs 3.22 crore penalty seems low considering they manipulated the market for 3 years. The punishment should be more severe to deter others. Maybe jail time for the directors?
M
Meena R.
This is why I only invest in index funds. Too much manipulation in individual stocks. Hope SEBI continues to clean up the market so small investors like me can trust it more.

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