Ponzi operators to face penalties worth three-times of profits

PTI Updated - March 12, 2018 at 03:56 PM.

Operators of illegal money-pooling schemes will soon face penalties of up to three times the profit made by them, as against the current provision of a meagre fine of Rs 1 crore.

The capital markets regulator SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) has decided to increase the monetary penalty for those running unauthorised Collective Investment Schemes (CIS), as the existing mechanism has not proved to be sufficient to deter such illegal mobilisation of money.

A proposal to this effect has been approved by SEBI and the same would be notified soon, a senior official said.

As per a SEBI memorandum in this regard, illegal mobilisation of funds within the existing legal framework falls within a provision wherein a maximum penalty of Rs 1 crore may be imposed.

SEBI is of the view that this penalty “is very meagre compared to the money mobilised by unregistered CIS, especially considering that in certain cases the money mobilised is in multiples of thousand crores.

“Hence, adjudication under the existing mechanism may not be sufficient to deter such illegal mobilisation of money.”

Accordingly, SEBI has decided to amend the relevant regulations to provide for “a penalty of Rs 25 crore or three times the amount of profits made, whichever is higher”.

To tackle the growing menace of investors being duped of their hard-earned money through various illegal investment pools, many of which are in the nature of ‘ponzi’ schemes, SEBI has been given the mandate to take action against all such money collection activities involving Rs 100 crore and more.

A typical ‘ponzi’ scheme involves the operator collecting a large amount of money from investors and paying them returns from their own money or the money collected from subsequent investors, rather than from profit earned by the person or entity operating such a scheme.

Such activities came to be known as ‘ponzi’ schemes after Charles Ponzi, who became notorious in the US in 1920s for deploying this technique while promising 50 per cent return on investments in 45 days and 100 per cent within 90 days.

A large number of such schemes have come to the fore in India as well, while many of them have faced regulatory actions by SEBI in recent months.

However, Sebi in most of the cases has only asked the operators of such schemes to refund the money to investors and stop such unauthorised activities. The schemes that have faced action include those promising huge returns based on investments on potatoes, goat rearing, cattle and butter schemes, Emu farming, real estate and holiday memberships.

Tightening the noose on perpetrators of such investment pools, SEBI in its board meeting earlier this month decided that all unauthorised CIS activities be declared as ‘fraudulent and unfair trade practices’ and dealt with accordingly.

Published on August 27, 2013 07:34
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