India’s markets regulator, SEBI, has executed a major policy shift designed to dramatically accelerate corporate capital efficiency while enforcing ironclad ethical standards for its own top brass.
The core metrics and structural changes approved by SEBI:
⚡ The New Buyback Blueprint (Effective August 1)
- The 66-Day Cap: SEBI is officially reintroducing share buybacks via stock exchanges, cutting administrative hurdles and aggressively capping the execution duration at a tight 66 working days.
- Regular Market Trading: Companies can now execute trades directly in the regular market without being bottlenecked by a dedicated buyback window, heavily boosting capital allocation flexibility.
- The 40% Deployment Mandate: To prevent artificial price support, firms must deploy at least 40% of their total buyback capital within the first half of the offer period.
- The Float Safeguard: Promoter shares will be strictly locked in during buybacks, and no transactions will be permitted if they breach India’s minimum 25% public float requirement.
🔒 Stricter Code of Conduct for SEBI Officials In a direct move to protect regulatory integrity following high-profile conflict-of-interest allegations against former leadership, SEBI has approved the voluntary adoption of an aggressive ethical code. Senior officials will now be required to completely liquidate or freeze their private equity holdings and entirely refrain from trading stocks while in office.
🏗️ Deepening Credit & Muni Bond Markets
- Securitization Eased: SEBI relaxed securitization norms, making it significantly easier for central bank-regulated entities to pool illiquid loans and repackage them into tradable, interest-bearing securities to free up lending capital.
- Municipal Bond Boost: New rules will now allow the refinancing of municipal bonds alongside fresh investor incentives, aiming to aggressively revive a stagnant market used to fund massive urban infrastructure projects.
Additionally, SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kant Pandey announced the regulator will drop a comprehensive fresh study in July tracking derivatives trading and the impact of recent regulatory curbs.
