India’s stock market regulator, SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India), has fined the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) ₹25 lakh for failing to treat all investors fairly and not keeping a close watch on broker activities. SEBI found that between February 2021 and September 2022, BSE shared important company news early with its staff and select paying clients—before the public could see it, which is against the rules.
These problems were revealed in a detailed 45-page report published by SEBI. It showed that the Listing Compliance Monitoring (LCM) team at BSE and a few paid users got access to market-sensitive news before it was published on BSE’s official website. There was no RSS feed or proper system in place to make sure the news reached everyone at the same time, which created unfair advantages.
SEBI also pointed out that BSE was not properly supervising brokers. Many brokers were found frequently changing client codes, which are used to identify traders. These changes were often made without proper checks or reasons, and could allow brokers to cover up wrong or unfair trades. BSE failed to take strict action or keep a watch on these suspicious activities.
SEBI said this was a clear violation of Regulation 39(3) of the SECC Regulations (2018), which says that all investors should get equal and timely access to information. SEBI also cited Section 23H of the SECC Act and Section 15HB of the SEBI Act, both of which deal with serious regulatory failures.
Santosh Shukla, a senior SEBI officer who issued the order, said BSE plays a very important role as a “first-level regulator” in the market, and such mistakes cannot be taken lightly. He added that the lack of basic safety measures and monitoring hurts the trust investors have in the market.
In its reply, BSE said the problem was a technical issue and has already been fixed as of September 13, 2023. They added time delays between internal and public access, made sure the public website gets information first, and also improved their internal monitoring systems. BSE also claimed that no investor was harmed because of the mistake.
But SEBI did not accept BSE’s explanation, saying the issue was serious and went against basic principles of fairness and market transparency. SEBI said BSE must pay the ₹25 lakh fine within 45 days, or further action like freezing assets could follow.
This incident is a strong reminder that fair and equal access to information is essential in the stock market. SEBI’s action shows that even big exchanges like BSE will be held accountable if they break the rules.
As India’s stock market becomes more important on the global stage, this case is a wake-up call for all financial institutions. To protect investor trust and market fairness, exchanges must follow strict rules, monitor brokers properly, and keep all information transparent and timely.