The Trading Members of Bombay Stock Exchange Limited (the Exchange) are hereby informed that a vacancy shall arise at the ensuing Fourth Annual General Meeting of the Exchange to be held on Friday the 7th August, 2009 due to completion of two consecutive terms pursuant to Article 13.18A of the Articles of Association by one of the Trading Member holding office as a Director in the Trading Member Director category at the said meeting.
The Board of Directors of the Exchange has decided to fill in the said vacancy in the Trading Member Director category under the provisions of Rules, Bye-laws and Regulations and Articles of Association of the Exchange.
Accordingly, nominations are invited from the eligible Trading Members of the Exchange pursuant to Article 13.16.2 of the Articles of Association to fill in ONE vacancy in the Trading Member Director category, at the Fourth Annual General Meeting of the Exchange.
The timetable for filling in the vacancy as per the provisions of the Articles of Association (Article 13.16.3 & 13.22), Rules, Bye-laws and Regulations (Rule 100-104) is as under.
Sr.No. Nature of activity Date
1 Issue of nomination forms. 24.06.2009
2 Last date for submission of duly filled in nomination forms. 23.07.2009
3 Last date for withdrawal of nomination forms. 28.07.2009
4 Election of Trading Member Director by Shareholders. At the Fourth Annual General Meeting to be held on Friday the 7th August, 2009.
Blank nomination forms can be downloaded from the Exchange’s website www.bseindia.com or collected in person and duly filled in nomination forms may be submitted in person at the following address between 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on all the working days.
Secretarial Department,
Bombay Stock Exchange Limited,
25th Floor, P.J. Towers,
Dalal Street, Fort, Mumbai 400 001.
Trading Members are advised to note the following terms and conditions of election:
The manner of election, appointment, tenure, resignation, vacation etc. of trading member directors shall be governed by Companies Act, 1956 save as otherwise specifically provided under or in accordance with the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956, The BSE (Corporatisation and Demutualisation) Scheme, 2005 and the Circulars issued by SEBI from time to time specifying the Governance of the Exchange.
The conditions of eligibility and the method of appointment of Trading Member Directors shall be governed by the Articles of Association, Rules, Bye-laws and Regulations and SEBI’s letter dated 31st August, 2005 prescribing the manner of appointment of Directors and other incidental and consequential matters related to the governance of the Exchange.
Since the election if required by ballot, shall be conducted under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956, Rules 96 to 112 given under the Chapter “Election of the Governing Board and Office Bearers” framed prior to Corporatisation of the Exchange to suit its requirement as an “Association of Persons” as per its constitution and objects, shall apply only to the extent it is not contrary to the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956, Articles of Association of the Exchange and SEBI directives on the governance of the Exchange issued from time to time.
Trading Members are advised to carefully examine the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956, Articles of Association, and Rules, Bye-Laws and Regulations of the Exchange, the provisions of The BSE (Corporatisation and Demutualisation) Scheme, 2005 and directives in respect of governance of the Exchange issued by SEBI from time to time before submission of the duly filled in nomination forms.
The contents of the nomination forms and the annexures/undertakings attached thereto shall form an integral part of the nomination form. Incomplete application forms would be liable for rejection.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
BSE - Election-To fill in the vacancy of a Trading Member Director
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
BSE to halt trading in derivatives of seven firms
The companies are Dr Reddy's Laboratories, Ambuja Cements, Ashok Leyland, Tata Chemicals, Indian Oil Corporation, Canara Bank and Petronet LNG Ltd, the BSE said in a circular.
"Derivatives contracts for the far month, ie., September 2009 and onwards would not be introduced upon expiry of June 2009 contracts ie on June 25, 2009," the circular said.
Existing contract months - July and August - would, however, continue to trade till they expire on the last Thursday of their respective expiry months, it added.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
SEBI removes entry load on MF schemes
SEBI's new guidelines stipulates that investors directly make payments to distributors instead of MF companies deducting it from the investment made in any scheme.
"There shall be no entry load for the schemes, existing or new, of a Mutual Fund. The upfront commission to distributors shall be paid by the investor to the distributor directly," SEBI said in a statement after its board meeting.
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Further, the upfront commission to distributors shall be paid by the investor to the distributor directly, the statement said.
The equity schemes of MFs are likely to be hurt the most as they attract the most entry load among schemes.
Share rule changes - approved by SEBI
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) approved the "anchor investor" concept under which an investor can subscribe to up to 30 percent of the quota for institutional investors in an initial public offering, said Chairman C.B.Bhave.
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"This is in response to (the) requests of issuers that there was a need for investors with prior commitment who will enhance their ability to sell the issue and bring more confidence," Bhave told reporters after a board meeting.
Under the new rules, an anchor investor would pay 25 percent of the total investment at the time of applying for the initial public offering, and the balance within two days of the closure of the issue.
Such anchor investors would have to adhere to a lock-in period of one month from the date of the share allotment.
Earlier this year, the regulator amended rules for declaring the price band of initial public issues and changed its rules on mandatory open offers in a drive to make the capital markets more investor friendly.
Bhave said SEBI had also decided to rationalise disclosure in the rights issues offer documents as information relating to the listed company offering such an issue was already available in public domain for investors.
In a rights issue, a company issues new shares to existing shareholders. Analysts say the upturn in the stock market is expected to see many firms rushing to tap this route to raise finances for either cutting debt or to fund expansion plans.
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"The revised disclosure would make the process of rights issue faster for companies and also reduce overall costs for such issues," said a SEBI statement.
The market regulator also said entry load for investments in mutual funds would be removed, which is expected to result in increased participation. It would also cut registration fees for market intermediaries by about 50 percent.
courtesy - economictimes
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
India decides to launch interest rate futures
India decided to introduce exchange-traded interest rate derivatives to help corporates, banks and households guard against interest rates volatility, a move that came nine months after launching of exchange- traded currency futures.
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The derivatives would be based on the 10-year government bond yields, according to market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and banking watchdog Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
"Eligible exchanges desirous of offering interest rate futures may apply to SEBI after fulfilling the conditions," SEBI said in a release.
The conditions are given in a report by an RBI-SEBI joint panel and are approved by both the regulators.
The report said those having a networth of Rs one crore would become trading members and those with Rs 10 crore networth would be clearing members in interest rate futures.
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The contract would be settled by physical delivery, the panel said. The move will also help to develop the debt markets.
courtesy - economictimes
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Indian shares on US bourses gain over $3 bn
Indian stocks trading on American bourses gained more than USD 3 billion in a week, with private sector lender HDFC Bank accounting half of it.
For the week ended June 12, Indian entities listed on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq added USD 3.21 billion to their market capitalisation, with the valuation of HDFC Bank alone climbing USD 1.16 billion.
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Among the 16 companies trading as American Depository Receipts (ADRs), another major gainer was copper producer Sterlite Industries whose market value shot up by USD 850 million.
Apart from HDFC Bank and Sterlite Industries, IT bellwether Infosys Technologies and scam-hit Satyam Computer Services too witnessed a significant rise in their respective market capitalisations.
While the valuation of Infosys grew by USD 619 million , that of Satyam Computer rose by USD 361 million.
Shares of Satyam Computer climbed higher on the NYSE last week after the entity reported a standalone profit of Rs 181 crore for the October-December quarter.
courtesy - economictimes