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Unit 2: Industrial Policy and Regulatory Structure




          The SEBI Insider Regulations, 1992 prohibits insider  trading and lays down that no insider  Notes
          should:
          1.   Either on his own behalf or on behalf of any other person, deals in securities of a company
               listed on any stock exchange on the basis of any unpublished price sensitive information;
               or

          2.   Communicate any unpublished price sensitive information to any person, with or without
               his or her request for such information except as required in the ordinary course of business
               or under any law; or
          3.   Counsel or procure any other person to deal in securities of any company on the basis of
               unpublished price sensitive information.

          2.4.5 Underwriting


          Underwriters make a commitment to get the underwritten issue subscribed either by others or
          by themselves. They agree to take unsubscribed portions of the issue. They render this service
          for a commission agreed upon between the issuing company and the underwriter subject to the
          ceiling under the Companies Act.
          Underwriter  services are  available from  brokers, investment, companies, commercial banks
          and term-lending institutions. Only such person (an individual, firm or a company) who has
          obtained certificate of registration from SEBI can act as an underwriter.


                 Example: Merchant bankers and stock brokers already have a valid certificate from SEBI
          for working as underwriters.



              Task       Find out the underwriters involved in some of the biggest IPOs that have
                         taken place in last five years.

          2.5 LPG Policy


          2.5.1 Liberalisation

          The  ongoing  reforms  in  India  are  referred  to  as  economic  liberalisation  of  India.  After
          Independence  in  1947,  India adhered  to  socialist  policies.  The  extensive  regulation  was
          sarcastically dubbed as the "Licence Raj"; the slow growth rate was named the "Hindu rate of
          growth". In the 1980s, the Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi initiated some reforms. His government
          was blocked by politics. In 1991, after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had bailed out the
          bankrupt state, the government of P. V. Narasimha Rao and his Finance Minister Manmohan
          Singh started breakthrough reforms. The new policies included opening for international trade
          and investment, deregulation, initiation of privatization, tax reforms, and inflation-Controlling
          measures. The overall direction of liberalization has since remained the same, irrespective of
          the ruling party, although no party has yet tried to take on powerful lobbies such as the trade
          unions and farmers, or contentious issues such as reforming labor laws and reducing agricultural
          subsidies.
          As of 2009, about 300 million people – equivalent to the entire population of the entire United
          States – have escaped extreme poverty. The fruits of liberalization reached their peak in 2007,
          with India recording its highest GDP growth rate of 9%. With this, India became the second
          fastest growing major economy in the world, next only to China. An Organisation for Economic




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