HomeNewsOpinionMandatory buyback could shelter shell-shocked investors from sanskari Sebi’s ban

Mandatory buyback could shelter shell-shocked investors from sanskari Sebi’s ban

The ban was imposed overnight without giving anyone an opportunity to exit. This is a sanskari ban of the type Pahlaj Nihalani made famous in Bollywood as the country’s censor-in-chief.

August 09, 2017 / 18:10 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Shishir Asthana Moneycontrol Research

One of the roles of Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) as a market regulator is to protect investors. Generally, the regulator does a good job of it but occasionally it overdoes things. In its zeal to protect investors, it ends up harming them.

In keeping with the current trend of curbing black money, SEBI and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs have identified 331 companies as suspected shell companies. The remedy suggested for dealing with these companies was to ban them from trading. The ban was imposed overnight without giving anyone an opportunity to exit. This is a sanskari ban of the type Pahlaj Nihalani made famous in Bollywood as the country’s censor-in-chief.

Story continues below Advertisement

In the process, the regulator has affected 36 lakh investors including big names like Rakesh Jhunjhunwala and some of the top mutual funds in the country. The immediate question that comes to mind is what were these savvy investors doing in shell companies? Surely, they have the wherewithal to identify one.

The problem seems to be in the classification of what the regulator calls ‘shell companies’. Shell companies are normally those which do not have any business and are used for money-laundering activity.