The Securities and
Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Thursday 4 July issued a circular
requiring stock brokers to establish an
institutional mechanism for prevention and detection of fraud or market abuse
in a bid to protect the interest of investors in securities market.
The circular mandates
the implementation of systems for the surveillance of trading activities and
internal controls, introduction of a whistle-blower policy, among other
obligations. These requirements are part
of SEBI (Stock Brokers) (Amendment) Regulations, 2024, which aim to ensure
higher standards of market integrity and investor protection.
The standards for
implementation of the same, including operational modalities will be formulated
by the broker’s Industry Standards Forum (ISF), in consultation with the
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the regulator said in the
circular.
The implementation will be based on the size of the
stock brokers. Brokers with more than 50,000 active Unique Client Codes (UCCs)
are required to comply by January 1, 2025.
Further, those with
2,001 to 50,000 active UCCs have to comply by April 1, 2025, and brokers with
up to 2,000 active UCCs must comply by April 1, 2026.
In addition, qualified
stock brokers must comply with these requirements by August 1, 2024,
considering their existing obligations for governance and client behaviour
surveillance.
SEBI directed the stock exchanges to bring the
provisions of this circular to the notice of stock brokers and also disseminate
the same on their websites.
It also directed them
to amend their bye-laws, and ensure that brokers notify the obligation/
requirement on the stock brokers to follow the standards adopted by the ISF,
and issue a joint notice which indicates the date of applicability of the
circular to various stock brokers based on the criteria.
The provisions of this circular shall come into
force in a risk-based, staggered manner to ensure smooth adoption, and effective implementation for all the stock
brokers by providing enough time for stock brokers, based on their size, for
making necessary changes, SEBI said.