SEBI's Game-Changing Move: Easier Duplicate Certificates for Rs 10 Lakh Investors

SEBI has proposed major changes to make getting duplicate securities certificates much simpler. Investors with certificates worth up to Rs 10 lakh won't need to file police complaints or publish newspaper ads anymore. Instead of multiple documents, they'll just need to submit a single combined affidavit-cum-indemnity bond. This move aims to reduce costs and make life easier for investors while supporting India's shift toward complete dematerialisation.

Key Points: SEBI Proposes Simplified Duplicate Securities Certificate Rules

  • Current process requires police complaints and newspaper ads for lost certificates
  • Threshold increased from Rs 5 lakh to Rs 10 lakh for simplified procedure
  • Single affidavit-cum-indemnity bond replaces multiple stamped documents
  • Above Rs 10 lakh cases still need FIR filing as before
2 min read

SEBI proposes simpler rules for issuing duplicate securities certificates, raises threshold to Rs 10 lakh

SEBI proposes raising duplicate securities certificate threshold to Rs 10 lakh, eliminating police complaints and newspaper ads for easier investor documentation process.

"To provide ease of investment and procedural convenience to the investors, it is proposed to increase the limits for simplified documentation - SEBI"

Mumbai, Nov 25

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Tuesday proposed making it easier for investors to get duplicate securities certificates in case their original ones are lost.

The regulator said the current process is complicated and often inconvenient because different companies and registrars follow different rules.

At present, investors must file a police complaint or FIR, publish a notice in a newspaper, and submit separate affidavits and indemnity bonds. These rules are relaxed only when the value of the lost securities is below Rs 5 lakh.

SEBI now wants to increase this limit to Rs 10 lakh. The regulator said that market capitalisation, investor participation, and portfolio sizes have grown significantly in recent years, so the older threshold needs to be updated.

"To provide ease of investment and procedural convenience to the investors, it is proposed to increase the limits for simplified documentation for issuance of duplicate securities from Rs 5 lakh to Rs 10 lakh," the market regulator said.

If the proposal is approved, investors with securities valued below Rs 10 lakh will only need to provide a single combined affidavit-cum-indemnity bond.

This will replace the current requirement of two different stamped documents.

“If the value of securities as on the date of submission of application, along with complete documentation as prescribed by the Board does not exceed Rs 10 lakhs, the security holder shall submit an Affidavit-cum-Indemnity bond as per the format prescribed by the Board, on a non-judicial stamp paper of appropriate value as prescribed by the Stamp Act of the state where the claimant resides,” the market regulator added.

For cases where the value is above Rs 10 lakh, filing an FIR or similar complaint will continue to be necessary.

SEBI said these changes would make the process simpler, reduce costs for investors, and help protect the rights of those who still hold physical security certificates.

All duplicate certificates issued in the future will be in dematerialised form, supporting the broader move towards complete dematerialisation of securities in India.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
₹10 lakh threshold makes sense considering inflation and how investment portfolios have grown. My father still has physical shares from the 90s - this will be a relief for many senior citizens who prefer physical certificates.
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Michael C
While I appreciate the simplification, I'm concerned about security. Removing police complaints for certificates worth up to ₹10 lakh might increase fraud. Hope SEBI has proper verification mechanisms in place.
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Ananya R
This is why we need complete dematerialization! Physical certificates create so many problems. Good that new duplicates will be in demat form. Hope SEBI pushes for 100% demat soon. 💯
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Sarah B
As someone who went through this nightmare last year for ₹3 lakh worth of shares, I can tell you this reform is much needed. The newspaper advertisement alone cost me ₹2000 and took 2 weeks!
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Vikram M
SEBI is finally thinking about common investors. The stamp paper requirements vary so much across states - this single affidavit will make things uniform. Hope state governments cooperate with the implementation.

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