HomeNewsBusinessMore market offenders settled with Sebi last year, as tighter enforcement resulted in nearly three applications a day

More market offenders settled with Sebi last year, as tighter enforcement resulted in nearly three applications a day

Sebi's annual report has shown that on an average three settlement applications were filed last year, almost double compared to FY24, as enforcement and investigation by the regulator improved, making it difficult for offenders to contest charges.

August 13, 2025 / 13:55 IST
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Market offenders rush to buy peace with Sebi, on an average 3 settlement applications filed per day.
Market offenders rush to buy peace with Sebi, on an average 3 settlement applications filed per day.

Capital market offenders rushed to bury the hatchet and settle charges last year, data from Sebi’s annual report revealed, with offenders opting to buy peace with the regulator by paying settlement charges rather than contest the matter at judicial forums.

Sebi’s annual report for FY25 showed that the number of settlement applications nearly doubled last year, with the settlement amount up nearly eight times compared to a year ago. The trend amounts to nearly three settlement applications each working day received by Sebi last year.

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The annual report published by Sebi showed that during FY25, Sebi received 703 applications for settlement, compared to 403 such applications in FY24. The total amount received by Sebi as settlement charges rose from Rs 94.5 crore in FY24 to Rs 799 crore in FY25. This number is expected to further rise as major settlement cases like the one involving NSE are pending. The exchange has approached Sebi to settle legacy issues of co-location and the dark fibre case, offering nearly Rs 1,400 crore as charges. NSE has also paid Rs 40.35 crore in June this year for violations found during Sebi’s inspection for the period between February 2021 and March 2022.

A top regulatory official told Moneycontrol on condition of anonymity that this rush for settlement is due to strong enforcement by the regulator. “With the existing tools and quality of enforcement the level of evidence and investigation has gone up, the evidences are strong and upfront, so offenders have less scope to contest, and in days to come this will further go up,” the official said.