Amid heat over Adani stocks, NSE says all its decisions ‘transparent’
- March 20, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Amid heat over Adani stocks, NSE says all its decisions ‘transparent’
Subject :Economy
Concept :
- Amid criticism by the Opposition of its decision to exclude three Adani group stocks from short-term surveillance, NSE on Sunday defended its action, saying such moves are based on non-discretionary, pre-announced and automatically applicable rules and involve no human interventions.
- After the National Stock Exchange (NSE) and BSE last week announced that three Adani group companies — Adani Enterprises, Adani Power and Adani Wilmar — will move out of the short-term additional surveillance measure (ASM), the Congress had asked why the stock exchange regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), is standing by and allowing investors to take on added exposure to such stocks.
Additional Surveillance Mechanism (ASM)
- The ASM was introduced in 2018 by SEBI with the intention to protect investors from market volatility and unusual changes in share price.
- The shortlisting of securities for placing in ASM is based on criteria that are jointly decided by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and exchanges, covering the parameters of:
- High low variation,
- Client concentration,
- Close-to-close price variation,
- Market capitalization [Market Cap = Current Share Price * Total Number of Shares Outstanding. For example, a company with 20 million shares selling at $100 a share would have a market cap of $2 billion]
- Volume variation,
- Price-Earnings Ratio, (Read below)
- Delivery percentage, and
- Number of unique PANs.
- Put simply, an ASM shortlisting signals to investors that the stocks have seen unusual activity.
- The shortlisting of securities under ASM is purely on account of market surveillance and it should not be construed as an adverse action against the concerned company / entity.
- Stricter measures are imposed on those stocks to discourage speculators and intra-day traders from taking heavy positions in stocks.
Stricter Exchange Rules imposed on ASM stocks:
- Percentage price band
- If Stock A enters the surveillance list today (say July 31), it will be moved into a percent price band on August 1. That is, its price can move only 5 percent either way from the previous day’s closing level. The stock will be halted from trading for the rest of the day if it breaches the 5 percent limit.
- From the fifth trading day (August 7, in our example), 100 percent margin money will be required to trade Stock A.
- Trade-To-Trade Settlement
- A stock in the surveillance list will be moved to a Trade-To-Trade Settlement if its PE ratio shoots above 100. It will be moved out of the list if its PE falls below 10 or below the ratio of Nifty 500 Index.
- Trade to Trade settlement is a segment where shares can be traded only for compulsory delivery basis.
- It means Trade to Trade shares cannot be traded on intraday. Each share purchased/sold which are parts of this segment need to be taken delivery by paying full amount.
- Price to Earnings Ratio or Price Earnings Multiple is the ratio of share price of a stock to its earnings per share (EPS).
- PE ratio is one of the most popular valuation metrics of stocks. It provides an indication of whether a stock at its current market price is expensive or cheap.