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Investments Via P-Notes Decline To Rs 69,670 Crore At November-End

The use of P-notes has been on a decline since 2017 and slumped to a nine-and-a-half year low of Rs 66,587 crore by October 2018.



A calculator sits on the desk of CPA Mike Dyer as he prepares federal income tax returns for clients at Tax Pros USA in La Grange, Kentucky, U.S. (Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)
A calculator sits on the desk of CPA Mike Dyer as he prepares federal income tax returns for clients at Tax Pros USA in La Grange, Kentucky, U.S. (Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)

Investments through participatory notes in the Indian capital market dropped to Rs 69,670 crore at the end of November.

P-notes are issued by registered foreign portfolio investors to overseas investors who wish to be part of the Indian stock market without registering themselves directly after going through a due diligence process.

The total value of investments via P-notes in the Indian markets (including equity, debt, and derivatives) declined by Rs 7,103 crore to Rs 69,670 crore by the end of November from Rs 76,773 crore at October-end. Of the total investments made till the end of November, Rs 52,749 crore was invested in equities, Rs 16,238 crore in debt and Rs 683 crore in derivatives segments.

The investment of Rs 76,773 crore at the end of October was registered after a continuous decline since June, the data with markets regulator Securities And Exchange Board of India showed. At the end of June 2019, the Indian capital market saw a total outflow of Rs 81,913 crore through P-notes, a drop from Rs 82,619 crore till May-end. At the end of July, it further declined to Rs 81,082 crore and till August-end the investment stood at Rs 79,088 crore.

The investment at September-end stood at Rs 76,611 crore and then marginally rose to Rs 76,773 crore at October-end. In July, SEBI's board approved a proposal to rationalise the framework for issuance of P-notes. The use of P-notes has been on a decline since 2017 and slumped to a nine-and-a-half year low of Rs 66,587 crore at the end of October last year.

In July 2017, SEBI notified stricter P-notes norms stipulating a fee of $1,000 that will be levied on each instrument to check any misuse for channelising black money. It had also prohibited FPIs from issuing such notes where the underlying asset is a derivative, except those which are used for hedging purposes.

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