Several stockbrokers have written to the President seeking a 10 per cent stake for all stakeholders of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) in the event it is demutualised (the process through which a member-owned company becomes shareholder-owned). Owing to dissent between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and brokers over the percentage that the latter [...]

Business Times

Stockbrokers write to Prez for 10% of CSE after demutualisation

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Several stockbrokers have written to the President seeking a 10 per cent stake for all stakeholders of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) in the event it is demutualised (the process through which a member-owned company becomes shareholder-owned).

Owing to dissent between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and brokers over the percentage that the latter should own after demutualisation, the process has been stalled for over half a decade.

The stockbrokers want more than 60 per cent in CSE (which is what the SEC is willing to part with) and argue that they deserve more as they started the CSE more than three decades ago without any assistance. But the regulator under the 2018 bill on share allocation was adamant that 60 is the number. Each broker will get a maximum of 5 per cent if they agree to the 60 per cent. The stockbrokers had wanted 70 per cent for the brokers and 30 per cent for the Capital Market Development Fund.

As of last year, the Treasury’s position was that the process should be 50: 50 (per cent). Officials in the president’s office said this was the reason that some stockbrokers were moved to write to the president. “They wanted all stakeholders, including the CSE staff and the stockbrokers to get 10 per cent of the CSE when it is demutualised,” one source said. He said upon inquiring further it came to light that this setup of stockbrokers was tired of the waiting and the dissent.

The 15-member stockbroking firms have got a detailed report done with the help of the IFC (World Bank affiliated International Finance Corporation) on the demutualisation of the CSE. After the Demutualisation Act is passed by the Parliament, the CSE as a company limited by guarantee will be converted to a company limited by shares. Demutualisation of an exchange segregates ownership and management from the trading rights of the members of an exchange. In due course, the demutualised stock exchange itself may be listed, and its shares are traded on the stock exchange.

Demutualisation of the CSE was made possible with the SEC Act and it will enable the exchange to transit from a mutual association of exchange members operating on a not-for-profit basis to a limited liability, for-profit company, accountable to shareholders which would also provide them access to capital that can be used both for investment in new technology and other development initiatives.

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