Foreign portfolio investments to generate pace with new dimensions
Be it on risk management, corporate governance, technological safeguards, investor protection practices, widening the participant base and enabling new products in the segment, Sebi has been on its toes to make India one of the top markets in term...

Since then, Sebi has been consistently making efforts to shape up the said market as per global standards and participation by offshore investors.
Be it on risk management, corporate governance, technological safeguards, investor protection practices, widening the participant base and enabling new products in the segment, Sebi has been on its toes to make India one of the top markets in terms of volume and a preferred investment jurisdiction for international investors.
Keeping the ongoing pace of easing the regulatory norms for foreign participants, Sebi recently permitted FPIs to participate in the Exchange Traded Commodity Derivatives (ETCD) market.
Now, any foreign investor can access the Indian ETCD market with or without having actual exposure to Indian physical commodities through the FPI route. The effective date would be notified by a separate circular.
There has been a long demand from the foreign investor community to allow them to access the ETCD platform in India. With the approval provided to the large institutional investors viz. AIFs (Cat III), PMS and Mutual Funds, the FPI community was the only left out category. This was even supported by the Commodity Derivative Advisory Committee and RBI who gave a sign-off when the Sebi rolled out a discussion paper on the same in December 2021.
With the competitive peer markets already allowing foreign players to invest in commodity segments and risk measurement measures in place by Sebi and the Central Bank, it was high time that India also offered a platform to global institutions.
Currently, the market watchdog has limited the participation to only non-agriculture and cash- settled contracts for FPIs. As prevailing in the currency derivatives market, a ceiling is also put on the exposure of 20 per cent of the client level position limit in a particular commodity derivatives contract, this is a good start for FPIs.
Currently, there are more than 10,000 FPIs registered with Sebi.
As India aspires to become a USD 5tn economy, opening the gates for foreign investors will not only aid in integrating Indian commodity markets and make them at par with global markets but also facilitate in managing pricing gaps and enhancing liquidity in the markets.
(The author is Partner & Leader – Financial Services Tax, BDO India. Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions are his own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)
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