To attract more overseas investment into the country, the Government is working on bringing new norms for a common KYC for foreign institutional investors, Finance Minister P. Chidambaram has said.
“Government is working on converging all KYC (Know Your Customer) norms and they (FIIs) will have common KYCs...
Government will soon come out with a new set of norms that will have a common KYC across various regulators, be it pension, banking, stocks or insurance. There should be one KYC,” he told the Rajya Sabha today.
He said if a new FII applies in India, it has to go through due diligence and once registered, it has to go through KYC norms.
At present, there are 1,756 FIIs registered in the country, he said, adding that it takes a maximum of three weeks for an FII to register with SEBI.
The Finance Minister was replying to members’ queries when the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Amendment) Bill, 2013, was taken up for consideration and passage in the House.
The Bill, which sought the appointment of a retired High Court judge having held the position for seven years for heading the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT), was passed by voice vote.
As per existing provisions, only a serving or retired Supreme Court judge or Chief Justice of a High Court can head the tribunal, but the Government was finding it difficult to fill the slot.
FII investments
Noting that the cumulative investment graph of FIIs in India is rising, Chidambaram said: “During the year 2012, there has been an investment of $31 billion by FIIs in India. During the current year from January 1 till date, there has been an investment of $10 billion by FIIs.”
The Finance Minister said stock markets have risen by 25 per cent and have given a good return, and hoped more foreign investment coming in the stock markets will give further returns to investors.
“I am confident that with more investment coming in from FIIs, the Sensex and Nifty will continue to be on an upward trajectory and give good results,” Chidambaram said.
On the rising graph of FII investment in the country, he said: “These are indicators that the markets are well regulated in the country.”
He said: “When I took over as Finance Minister, the Sensex was 17,257, it is now 19,680. The Nifty was 5,240 and now it is 5,949 today.”
Insider trading
The Finance Minister also assured of serious action in matters of insider trading and said SEBI has been asked to step up systems and surveillance to deal with such matters.
“We take a serious view of insider trading. Insider trading is a serious offence. They are clever people. We have to be cleverer than the perpetrators of fraud. We are trying to become cleverer. I have told SEBI to improve the surveillance. As we move forward, we will improve our systems and surveillance,” Chidambaram said.
Claiming that our capital market was among the best regulated in the world, the Finance Minister said: “SEBI is extremely active and taking action on defaulting companies.”
He informed the House that from April 1, 2009 to February 28, 2013, SEBI has suspended trading in 1,125 companies as on February 25.