HomeNewsBusinessMarketsSEBI cracks India's first big "spoofing" case that involved a stock broker and 173 stocks

SEBI cracks India's first big "spoofing" case that involved a stock broker and 173 stocks

The regulator investigated Patel Wealth Advisors and its directors over three years

April 28, 2025 / 21:08 IST
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Spoofing involves placing large, phantom orders that are disclosed but way below the market price to create a false impression of demand.
Spoofing involves placing large, phantom orders that are disclosed but way below the market price to create a false impression of demand.

A stock broker who "spoofed" orders to create an artificial demand for stocks, and its associates, have been asked to return over Rs 3.22 crore illegal gains made.

Patel Wealth Advisors Pvt Ltd (PWAPL) has been from accessing the securities market from its proprietary account, and its directors have been banned from the market.

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In an order issued on April 28, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) detailed how the investigating officials unmasked a tactic that has been used in the global markets but was observed for the first time at such a big scale in India. The earlier instance was caught in 2023 with a partnership firm named Nimi Enterprises. But that spoofing activity was limited to the cash segment for eight months, while the present case involving PWAPL involved both cash and derivatives segment and was done over three years. The regulator's PWAPL investigation uncovered such activity across 173 scrips over 292 scrip-days, sometimes multiple times in a day resulting in 621 unique spoofing instances.

Spoofing involves placing large, phantom orders that are disclosed but way below the market price to create a false impression of demand. These orders are not meant to execute but are meant to bait investors, who see them as genuine demand, and rush in to join the rally.