| Securities and Exchange Board of India | |
|---|---|
| भारतीय प्रतिभूति और विनिमय बोर्ड | |
| SEBI Bhavan, Mumbai headquarters | |
| Agency overview | |
| Formed | 12 April 1992 |
| Jurisdiction | Government of India |
| Headquarters | Mumbai, Maharashtra |
| Employees | 525 (2009)[1] |
| Agency executive | Upendra Kumar Sinha, Chairman |
| Website | |
| sebi.gov.in | |
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (frequently abbreviated SEBI) is the regulator for the securities market in India.
History
It was formed officially by the Government of India in 1992 with SEBI Act 1992[2] being passed by the Indian Parliament. SEBI is headquartered in the business district of Bandra-Kurla complex in Mumbai, and has Northern, Eastern, Southern and Western regional offices in New Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai and Ahmedabad.
Controller of Capital Issues was the regulatory authority before SEBI came into existence[3]; it derived authority from the Capital Issues (Control) Act, 1947.
[edit]Organization structure
The Board comprises[5]
| Name | Designation |
|---|---|
| Upendra Kumar Sinha | Chairman |
| M. S. Sahoo | Whole-Time Member |
| Dr K.M. Abraham | Whole Time Member |
| Prashant Saran | Whole Time Member |
| CA. T. V. Mohandas Pai | Director, Infosys |
| Dr. Thomas Mathew | Joint Secretary, Ministry of Finance |
| V. K. Jairath | Member Appointed |
| Anand Sinha | Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India |
List of former Chairmen[6]:
| Name | From | To |
|---|---|---|
| C. B. Bhave | 18 February 2008 | 18 February 2011 |
| M. Damodaran | 18 February 2005 | 18 February 2008 |
| G. N. Bajpai | 20 February 2002 | 18 February 2005 |
| D. R. Mehta | 21 February 1995 | 20 February 2002 |
| S. S. Nadkarni | 17 January 1994 | 31 January 1995 |
| G. V. Ramakrishna | 24 August 1990 | 17 January 1994 |
| Dr. S. A. Dave | 12 April 1988 | 23 August 1990 |
[edit]Functions and responsibilities
SEBI has to be responsive to the needs of three groups, which constitute the market:
- the issuers of securities
- the investors
- the market intermediaries.
SEBI has three functions rolled into one body: quasi-legislative, quasi-judicial and quasi-executive. It drafts regulations in its legislative capacity, it conducts investigation and enforcement action in its executive function and it passes rulings and orders in its judicial capacity. Though this makes it very powerful, there is an appeals process to create accountability. There is a Securities Appellate Tribunal which is a three-member tribunal and is presently headed by a former Chief Justice of a High court - Mr. Justice NK Sodhi. A second appeal lies directly to the Supreme Court.
SEBI has enjoyed success as a regulator by pushing systemic reforms aggressively and successively (e.g. the quick movement towards making the markets electronic and paperless rolling settlement on T+2 basis). SEBI has been active in setting up the regulations as required under law.
SEBI has also been instrumental in taking quick and effective steps in light of the global meltdown and the Satyam fiasco.[citation needed] It had[when?] increased the extent and quantity of disclosures to be made by Indian corporate promoters. More recently, in light of the global meltdown,it liberalised the takeover code to facilitate investments by removing regulatory strictures. In one such move, SEBI has increased the application limit for retail investors to Rs 2 lakh, from Rs 1 lakh at present.[7]
[edit]Powers
SEBI has the right to search and seizure where just cause can be given[8]. In matters of security trading, SEBI has the power to restrict and allow trading in a given scrip without any external (i.e. judicial or executive) intervention[9].
[edit]SEBI Committees
- Technical Advisory Committee
- Committee for review of structure of market infrastructure institutions
- Members of the Advisory Committee for the SEBI Investor Protection and Education Fund
- Takeover Regulations Advisory Committee
- Primary Market Advisory Committee (PMAC)
- Secondary Market Advisory Committee (SMAC)
- Mutual Fund Advisory Committee
- Corporate Bonds & Securitization Advisory Committee
- Takeover Panel
- SEBI Committee on Disclosures and Accounting Standards (SCODA)
- High Powered Advisory Committee on consent orders and compounding of offences
- Derivatives Market Review Committee
- Committee on Infrastructure Funds
[edit]See also
- Bombay Stock Exchange
- National Stock Exchange of India
- Forward Markets Commission (India)
- Securities Commission
- Financial regulation
- List of financial regulatory authorities by country
- Stock exchange
- Regulation D (SEC)
- Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
[edit]References
- ^ http://www.sebi.gov.in/acts/EmployeeDetails.html
- ^ THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE BOARD OF INDIA ACT, 1992 - No.15 of 1992
- ^ Share Market Basics: Controller of Capital Issues
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Microsoft Word - Boardmembers.doc" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- ^ "Former Chairmen of SEBI". SEBI. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
- ^ "Sebi doubles retail limit, tightens IPO norms". business.rediff.com. Retrieved 27 Oct 2010.
- ^ "Sebi Enjoys Broader Powers Now". The Indian Express Limited. 30 December 2002. Retrieved 22 Feb 2011.
- ^ Sundaresan, Somasekhar (26 October 2009). "SEBI has greater powers than US SEC". New Delhi. Retrieved 22 Feb 2011.
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