stock market regulations: Government not in favour of regulatory intervention in stock markets: Report

The finance ministry is not in favour of any major regulatory intervention in the stock market, and believes that over-regulation could lead to nervousness among participants, ETNow news channel reported, quoting sources.

The news comes in the backdrop of the recent measures taken by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SebI) to check on the building froth in the small and midcap stocks.

In February, the market regulator had asked the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) to put in place a framework to regulate the flows into the midcap and smallcap funds which have been unprecedented in the last one year.

Asset management companies were also asked to conduct a stress test and share the results of the same.

Also read | Sebi stress test: Top mutual funds reveal how long can it take to …

These developments triggered some nervousness and increased volatility in the market. While S&P BSE Smallcap index has logged more than 55% returns in FY24, the alarm bells rung by the market regulator saw the index crack more than 8% and the Nifty Smallcap gauge to plummet 10% in March. Also Read | Little stocks in big trouble! 374 smallcaps fall at least 30% from peak …

While Sebi remains concerned over the bubble formation in the broader market, the government is in favour of increasing retail participation in the stock market, given that

India is predicted to see high growth over the next three years, the news channel sources said.

Even Sebi former executive director and a top lawyer Sandeep Parekh voiced concerns

over the stress tests directed by the market regulator, saying it was unnecessarily spooking the market.

He asserted that it was not the job of the regulator to predict either market levels or liquidity.

“It can be a self-fulfilling prophecy – if you are trying to predict that the markets are overvalued and that liquidity can vanish – the prediction itself would dry liquidity and reduce prices,” Parekh said.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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