Lesson 2 of 13 · Free
Contents
- 1 Regulators
- 1.1 Why markets need a regulator
- 1.2 How SEBI came to exist
- 1.3 What SEBI actually does
- 1.4 Other regulators you’ll encounter
- 1.5 What this means for you as a retail investor
- 1.6 Who Watches Whom — The Indian Market Regulatory Stack
- 1.7 SEBI’s Real Powers — What They Can and Cannot Do
- 1.8 FAQs — Regulator Boundaries
Regulators
Why markets need a referee. SEBI’s three mandates, the scams that shaped it, and the other regulators you’ll encounter.
Why markets need a regulator
Stock markets are a peculiar institution. They handle trillions of rupees in transactions every day among parties who never meet, settle on trust, and depend on accurate disclosure from the companies they trade. Without a referee, that trust collapses quickly. Insider trading, fake disclosures, manipulated prices, and broker frauds are not theoretical — they have happened, repeatedly, in every country including ours.
India’s primary capital-markets regulator is the Securities and Exchange Board of India, established under the SEBI Act, 1992. SEBI has three statutory mandates: protect investors, develop the market, and regulate participants. Those three goals constantly trade off against each other — too much protection and you choke off innovation; too much regulation and you push activity offshore — and SEBI’s job is balancing them in real time.
How SEBI came to exist
SEBI began life as a non-statutory body in 1988, advisory only. The 1992 Harshad Mehta scam — the ₹4,000 crore stock market manipulation built on bank receipts — exposed how loosely the equity market was supervised. Parliament passed the SEBI Act later that year, granting full statutory powers: investigation, fines, market bans, and rule-making.
Subsequent scandals — Ketan Parekh in 2001, the IPO-allotment scam in 2005, NSEL in 2013, and more recently the Karvy and PMC episodes — each triggered tighter SEBI rules. Today’s framework reflects three decades of post-mortems baked into circulars.
What SEBI actually does
1. Protect investors. Disclosure norms for listed companies (quarterly results, related-party transactions, material events). KYC standards. The SEBI Complaint Redressal System (SCORES) for investor grievances. Investor education campaigns. Caps on transaction charges and brokerage.
2. Develop the market. Approving new product categories — REITs, InvITs, AIFs, social stock exchange, T+1 settlement, T+0 pilots. Allowing foreign institutional investors and easing their onboarding. Pushing dematerialisation so paper certificates are extinct.
3. Regulate participants. Registration and supervision of every intermediary — brokers, depository participants, mutual funds, AMCs, merchant bankers, debenture trustees, credit-rating agencies, custodians, research analysts, investment advisers, portfolio managers, registrars and transfer agents. SEBI doesn’t run the market; it sets the rules and audits the players who do.
4. Enforce. SEBI can investigate any market participant, attach assets, ban people from markets for years, and impose fines under the Securities Laws (Amendment) Act 2014. Appeals go to the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT).
Other regulators you’ll encounter
- RBI — banks, currency, foreign exchange, payment systems. SEBI and RBI overlap on banking stocks and bond markets — there’s a permanent coordination mechanism.
- IRDAI — insurance products. ULIPs and ULIP-style mutual funds sit at the SEBI-IRDAI boundary.
- PFRDA — pension funds, including NPS.
- MCA — company law, board governance, statutory compliance. ROC filings live here.
- Income Tax Department — capital gains, STT, dividend distribution rules.
What this means for you as a retail investor
Every action you take — opening a demat account, buying a stock, applying for an IPO, redeeming a mutual fund — sits inside SEBI’s regulatory perimeter. The intermediaries you use are registered with SEBI; their conduct is audited; their grievance handling has prescribed timelines. If something goes wrong, you have a formal recourse path through SCORES, and ultimately SAT.
Knowing that doesn’t make markets safe — you can still lose money on bad investment choices — but it makes the playing field reasonably level and the rules reasonably enforced. That’s why participation has exploded from under one crore demat accounts in 2019 to over 17 crore by 2025. Trust scales markets.
Cement what you just learned
Head to our free Study Hub and find SEBI Regulations. Each topic comes with four interactive study modes — quiz yourself, flip through flashcards, unscramble jumbled terms, and solve a topic-specific crossword. No login required.
Who Watches Whom — The Indian Market Regulatory Stack
Indian capital-market governance is split across multiple specialised regulators. Knowing the boundaries matters because complaints filed at the wrong door go unanswered. Here is the practical map:
| Regulator | What they oversee | Where to complain |
|---|---|---|
| SEBI | Exchanges, brokers, AMCs, listed companies, investment advisors | SCORES portal (scores.gov.in) |
| RBI | Banks, NBFCs, NPCI (UPI/IMPS), G-Sec primary market | RBI Ombudsman (cms.rbi.org.in) |
| IRDAI | Insurance — life, general, health, reinsurance | Bima Bharosa portal |
| PFRDA | NPS, Atal Pension Yojana, pension funds | CRA grievance system |
| MCA | Company filings, ROC compliance, NCLT proceedings | MCA21 portal |
SEBI’s Real Powers — What They Can and Cannot Do
SEBI was constituted under the SEBI Act 1992 with three statutory roles: protect investor interests, develop the securities market, and regulate intermediaries. Its enforcement teeth include: order disgorgement of unlawful gains, ban entities from market access, levy monetary penalties (up to ₹25 crore per offence under Section 15A-15J), and refer criminal matters to the Special Court. Recent examples include the ₹624 crore disgorgement in the DHFL matter and bans on multiple unregistered investment advisors. What SEBI cannot do: pronounce on criminal fraud (that goes to the Special Court or SFIO) or recover money from individual borrowers (banking grievances go to RBI).
FAQs — Regulator Boundaries
My broker is not letting me withdraw funds — who do I complain to?
SEBI through the SCORES portal. Brokers fall under SEBI Stock Broker Regulations; the SCORES system mandates response within 30 days.
My ULIP is not delivering returns as promised — SEBI or IRDAI?
IRDAI. ULIPs are insurance products even though they invest in markets; IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal is the right venue.
Where do I check if an advisor is SEBI-registered?
SEBI’s Investment Adviser Database at sebi.gov.in/intermediaries. Always verify before paying for advice — unregistered advisors are unenforceable contracts.
A Day in the Life of a SEBI Investigation
SEBI investigations typically begin with a market surveillance alert — abnormal trading volume, sudden price moves, or whistle-blower complaints. The Integrated Surveillance Department runs algorithms across NSE/BSE data flagging anomalies. A preliminary inquiry is opened within 30 days. If wrongdoing is suspected, a formal investigation under Section 11C of the SEBI Act follows, with powers to summon, search, and seize records. The whole-time member adjudicates the case through a Show Cause Notice, hearing, and final order. Affected parties can appeal to SAT (Securities Appellate Tribunal) within 45 days, and from there to the Supreme Court. Recent landmark orders include the ₹1,000+ crore Adani-Hindenburg investigation and multiple insider-trading rulings against listed-company directors. SEBI publishes every order on sebi.gov.in — required reading for serious students of Indian markets.
The Whistleblower Mechanism
SEBI runs a structured Informant Mechanism (Reg. SEBI [Prohibition of Insider Trading] Amendment 2019) where credible whistleblowers can receive monetary rewards up to ₹1 crore for information leading to disgorgement of insider-trading gains. The Whole-Time Member’s panel evaluates the credibility, materiality and novelty of every submission. Public-interest disclosures via the SCORES portal also feed SEBI’s surveillance. For ordinary investors, these mechanisms matter because they signal that SEBI takes structural fraud seriously — a credibility premium that supports Indian equity valuations relative to less-policed emerging markets. The market does not always trust regulators, but the trend since 2016 has been steady tightening of enforcement.
Beyond enforcement, SEBI also runs developmental initiatives: the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF) — funded by unclaimed dividends and matured bonds — pays out claims to legitimate heirs and funds investor education campaigns nationwide. The SEBI-recognised Investor Service Centres (ISCs) across 17 cities offer free in-person grievance resolution. SEBI’s annual Investor Education Week runs in February with free webinars and material in 13 regional languages. For the average retail investor, knowing these resources exist transforms SEBI from a distant bureaucracy into a practical resource — one that has refunded thousands of crores to defrauded investors over the past decade and continues to expand its educational footprint.
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