MUMBAI (Reuters) - The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Wednesday allowed hedge funds registered as category III Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) to invest in commodity derivatives ...
The most immediate and tangible impact will come from SEBI’s proposal to shift bulk and block deal disclosures from the UCC ...
The logo of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is pictured on the premises of its headquarters in Mumbai, March 1, 2017. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade/Files 28,921 people played the daily ...
Sebi suggests consolidating a range of overlapping provisions into a single, unified framework covering both equity and ...
Markets regulator Sebi on Friday proposed an overhaul of the trading-related framework at stock exchanges, aimed at ...
Sebi wants to simplify trading rules and give stock exchanges more regulatory responsibility. From broker net-worth norms to ...
SEBI has proposed a unified trading rulebook to merge overlapping regulations, simplify compliance and enhance transparency ...
Proposals span margin trading norms, market making, SME listings and commodity derivatives as the regulator targets a simpler ...
Speaking at an event organised by the Commodity and Capital Participants Association of India (CPAI), SEBI Chairperson Tuhin Kanta Pandey and Whole-Time Member Kamlesh Varshney outlined the ...
A panel set up by India's market regulator will recommend easing curbs on commodity derivatives and suggest steps to make it more attractive to institutional investors in a final report to be ...
Sebi plans to constitute a working group to review the non-agricultural commodity derivatives segment, chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Saturday, as the watchdog looks to deepen market ...
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