HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | SEBI's Affordability Index is a status symbol tag with a different name

Opinion | SEBI's Affordability Index is a status symbol tag with a different name

It is difficult to see how an affordability index would be of any help in fighting insider trading or circular trading.

October 29, 2018 / 18:26 IST
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Shishir Asthana

SEBI's proposed Affordability Index sounds like old wine in a new bottle. The markets regulator is considering a proposal for investors and traders to get a credit-rating like score based on their income or net worth which will establish the affordability of transactions and help prevent stock price manipulation by mule accounts, show the agenda papers of its last board meeting.

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This scheme looks like another avatar of its earlier proposal in June where the regulator wanted to cap equity exposure based on an investor's net worth. As these pages have argued earlier, targeting investors based on income or net worth criteria would harm the market rather than do any good and must be rejected.

In the earlier case, SEBI's reasoning was that this idea was needed to prevent individuals from going overboard on equity investments. Investors were supposed to get a net-worth certificate from their chartered accountant to prove they are solvent enough to enter the exchange or trade in equities. Stakeholders objected calling it a regulatory overreach. A persistent SEBI has repackaged the idea. Only now it is not going to use the data to decide investor exposure but track benami accounts.