HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceIIFL AMC case: Should you be worried when a fund house staff is caught while front running shares?

IIFL AMC case: Should you be worried when a fund house staff is caught while front running shares?

IIFL AMC recently suspended an employee who was caught by SEBI for front running. It helps if your fund house implements strong surveillance systems and discourages such corrupt market practices

October 15, 2020 / 09:11 IST
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On October 1, the capital market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) issued an ad interim ex parte order against a dealer (Santosh Brijraj Singh) of IIFL Asset Management Company (AMC) and a former sub-broker (Adil Suthar) of Angel Broking for colluding with one another and front running. Now, front running is a corrupt stock market practice that involves a market participant – usually a dealer or a broker – entering the equity market minutes before a large institutional investor (typically a mutual fund) transacts in the same set of scrips that the institution trades in. The aim is to make profits with the information available, of what the institution would buy or sell. When large institutions buy or sell shares, price movements are generally substantial, given the large quantity of stocks involved. The 70-page SEBI order says that apart from IIFL AMC, there were five other alternate investment funds (AIF) on whose trades Singh and Suthar benefitted from.

What really happened at IIFL AMC?

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Like all equity investors, Singh wanted to profit from the stock markets. So, he chose to mimic IIFL AMC’s trades in such a way that he could benefit from the share price movement that happens when such large institutions buy and sell in the market.

Whenever a fund house buys or sell its securities, its in-house dealers execute the trades. Fund houses appoint a panel of brokers with whom the dealers stay in touch. The dealer’s job is to get the trade executed; he doesn’t buy or sell himself. The fund house’s brokers actually buy and sell shares. If the volume of shares is high, it can move the prices sharply, especially if it’s a small or mid-sized company with low liquidity. This is the opportunity that front runners such as Singh and Suthar kept an eye on.