Securities Market Infrastructure Trends in India
Securities Market Infrastructure Trends in India
t is a well-established truth that the Indian capital markets have taken significant strides in the last decade. The reforms undertaken by the Government over the last decade have not only refined and modernised the market infrastructure, but increased the attractiveness of the Indian capital markets to global investors. The fiscal year 2004-05 saw net investments from Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) reaching USD 10 billion, with total net FII investment standing at USD 35.9 billion as of March 31, 2005. Making India a benchmark for the globe is the mission statement of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). The continuing inflow of foreign investment, the seamless implementation of T+2 settlement, and the rapid growth of the derivatives market are testaments to the fundamental resilience and structural strength of the securities market. Continuous improvements in infrastructure and increased sophistication of available products are inevitable consequences of the rapid development of the Indian capital markets. We summarise below the major changes that are anticipated by the market in the coming months, and assess their likely implications for foreign investors. 1. Enhancing the corporate bond market infrastructure SEBI had identified the need to build further transparency in Indias corporate bond markets in its Strategic Action Plan for 2004-05. In his 2005-06 Union Budget speech, the Finance Minister of India announced that a committee of experts would look into the changes that are required to make the corporate bond market as vibrant as the equity capital markets. The Committee will look into legal, regulatory, tax and market design issues. The corporate debt market today in India is an over-the-counter market
with bilateral settlement taking place directly between counterparties due to the absence of a central clearing house. It can be expected that the infrastructural measures recommended by the Committee would aim to build the same transparency and risk containment measures that exist in the equity markets today. Citigroup in India has played an active role in the fixed income market in India, contributing to the setting up of the core infrastructure for central counterpartybased clearing and settlement for government securities and foreign exchange.
2. Extending Straight through Processing to the derivatives and debt markets Straight through Processing (STP) was successfully introduced in the equity capital markets in 2002-03. In 2004, SEBI mandated STP for all institutional transactions executed through the stock exchanges, which has ensured STP for the equity capital markets. However, the process flow for debt and derivatives trading and settlement continues to be manual and paper-based. The equity exchange traded derivatives segment in
Infrastructure
CitiDirect Online Banking global award winning platform which saw a growth of 108% in usage volumes during 2004. - Over 5800+ users in India. - Over 2 million transaction processed in 2004 with value of USD 22 billion. assets under custody of USD 23 billion.
FX Volumes Citibank is Indias largest foreign bank in the foreign exchange market with a 14% market share.
4. Structural changes to payment and settlement infrastructure Indias payment and settlement system currently involves a variety of payment instruments both paperbased and electronic. Settlement is characterised by the presence of multiple clearing houses (about 1050) handled by various legal entities. The clearing houses are voluntary bodies set up by the participating banks and post offices and they function in an autonomous manner. Due to the multiplicity of operators, local practices vary from place to place, which may lead to a lack of coordination among organisations resulting in inconsistency of operations. This also limits the scope of implementing innovations in the systems. In its vision document titled Payment Systems Vision 2005-08, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has envisaged the Indian Retail Clearing function being entrusted to a separate single legal entity while the RBI remains the settlement institution for all clearing systems. The single entity having uniformity in structure, operations and procedures will facilitate standardisation and efficiency in the processing of smaller value payments. Citigroup India is a member of the National Payments Council constituted by the RBI. Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) is expected to revolutionise the payments infrastructure in the country. The expansion of RTGS has been hampered by the relatively low penetration of technology in public sector banks. A reduction in operational costs will hasten the adoption of RTGS for securities settlements and reduce usage of paper-based instruments in the country. Citigroup has won the
Infrastructure