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23 december 2006
rbi
allows 49 per cent fdi allowed in stock exchanges
mumbai: the reserve bank of india has allowed foreign
investment up to 49 per cent in stock exchanges, depositories
and clearing corporations. till now fdi with the prior
approval of the foreign investment promotion board, had
been capped at 26 per cent while the limit on foreign
institutional investment (fii) was 23 per cent.
an
rbi release said fiis can pick up stakes only through
secondary market purchases and "shall not seek and
will not get representation on the board of directors."
in
a separate release, the sebi stipulated "no foreign
investor, including persons acting in concert, will hold
more than 5 per cent of the equity in these companies".
this will apply only to stock exchanges.
in
november, sebi had capped individual investment, direct
or indirect, at five per cent. it had also stipulated
that persons (or persons acting in concert) must meet
eligibility requirements set down by the sebi to acquire
more than one per cent of the paid up equity capital of
a recognised stock exchange.
dr
r h patil, chairman, clearing corporation of india ltd,
said the directive will have a more direct impact on the
bombay stock exchange rather than the nse which has been
a corporate entity since its inception. the only impact,
if any, would be if the existing shareholders of nse decide
to sell their shares to fiis.
"given
that it is a profit making organisation, there appears
to be no reason for nse to tap the market to finance any
of its expansion plans," dr patil said.
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