SEBI: Structure and Powers
SEBI | the Securities and Exchange Board of India | was established in 1992 under the SEBI Act. Headquartered in Mumbai, it's not a traditional government ministry. It operates with quasi-legislative, quasi-executive, and quasi-judicial powers. That phrase matters. Most investors see SEBI as just "the regulator." It's far broader.
Three core mandates:
- Protect investors from fraud and malpractice
- Develop and regulate securities markets
- Regulate intermediaries (brokers, advisors, analysts, traders)
The SEBI Board has a Chairman plus 6 members: 2 from the Finance Ministry, 1 from the RBI, and 5 nominated members from the securities industry. That composition matters | it's a balance between government oversight and market expertise. Madhabi Puri Buch's tenure (2022 to present) has shifted enforcement toward algo trading, finfluencers, and insider trading patterns in ways previous chairs did not emphasize.
Here's what most investors don't know: SEBI is self-funded. It doesn't take taxpayer money. Fees from brokers, exchanges, and financial services firms fund its operations. That means SEBI's budget is driven by market activity | when volatility spikes, trading fees rise, and SEBI's enforcement budget expands. It also means regulatory priorities shift with market structure. When options trading exploded, SEBI suddenly tightened F&O rules.
Quasi powers breakdown: SEBI can write regulations (like rules on insider trading), investigate violations (like a corporate investigator), and adjudicate cases (like a judge). It's all three. That's why SEBI notices are serious | they carry the weight of law.
Key Regulations Every Investor Must Know
SEBI doesn't just have one rule. There are hundreds. But five are foundational to how your trades work and how you're protected.
SEBI (LODR) 2015 | Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements
Every listed company must follow LODR. What does that mean for you? Continuous disclosure. If a company buys back shares, launches a major product, or announces a restructuring, it must disclose to the exchange within a time window. Related party transactions (like a director's family company selling to the listed firm) must be disclosed. Board composition, audit committee reports | all public. SEBI LODR is why you can see corporate governance details on exchange websites. No LODR, no listing.
SEBI (PIT) 2015 | Prohibition of Insider Trading
This one affects more people than you think. Insider trading isn't just for corporate executives. Anyone with unpublished price-sensitive information (UPSI) who trades on it | or tips others to trade on it | is liable. What's UPSI? Financial results, dividend announcements, mergers, board appointments, order wins, regulatory approvals. If you hear about a ₹100Cr acquisition 24 hours before it's announced, and you buy the stock, you've traded on UPSI. So has your friend if you forwarded the WhatsApp tip and she bought.
"Connected persons" include employees, board members, relatives, business associates, and anyone with access to material, non-public information. The definition is deliberately broad. Even accidental trading on UPSI is a violation. You bought based on a news article you misinterpreted? You saw a draft presentation in a café? Still liable.
Penalty: Up to ₹25 crores or 3 times the profit made from the violation, whichever is higher. Plus potential criminal prosecution.
SEBI (PFUTP) 2003 | Prohibition of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices
Front-running: a broker knows a large buy order is coming and buys first. Pump-and-dump: spread rumors about a penny stock, pump the price, sell at the top, and dump it. Spoofing: place fake orders to create the appearance of demand, then cancel before execution. Layering: rapid placement and cancellation of orders to create false volume signals. All PFUTP violations. SEBI surveillance flags unusual patterns in real time. If your trading algorithm places 10,000 orders in 2 seconds and cancels 9,900, SEBI's systems flag it.
SEBI (SAST) 2011 | Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers
When someone acquires 5% of a company's shares, they must disclose. At 25%, they must launch an open offer to all shareholders. These rules are designed to prevent creeping acquisitions and hidden control shifts. They protect minority shareholders. For retail investors, SAST means if a promoter starts quietly buying, you'll know when they hit 5%.
For You, Not Just Corporates
I didn't design RupeeCase as a personalized advisory platform | I designed it to publish systematic strategies and research. When I first started sharing trade ideas publicly, I had to understand exactly where the line was. Educational content (explaining a strategy) is legal. Recommending specific buy/sell actions to specific people is investment advice and requires SEBI registration. Most of that line comes from SEBI's 2013 regulations on Investment Advisers and 2014 regulations on Research Analysts.
Insider Trading: The Rules You Didn't Know Applied to You
SEBI's insider trading regulations are detailed. Here's what matters for your own trades.
UPSI is defined broadly. It includes any information that's not public and could affect a stock's price. Financial results (before announcement). Dividend declarations (before announcement). Mergers and acquisitions. Board appointments or removals. Regulatory approvals. Major contract wins. Asset sales. Loss of a key customer. All of these are UPSI.
Connected persons is also broad. If you're an employee, you're a connected person. If you're a director's spouse, connected. A supplier who knows revenue numbers? Connected. A consultant who sees a strategic pivot? Connected. Your uncle who mentioned a merger at dinner? He becomes a connected person the moment he discusses UPSI with you.
Trading windows matter. Listed companies set trading windows | periods when insiders can trade. Outside trading windows, insiders (and their relatives) are restricted. SEBI's surveillance looks for trading clusters around earnings announcements. If 30 employees sell on the same day, and the stock drops 5% two weeks later on bad earnings, SEBI's algorithms detect that pattern.
WhatsApp and social tips are tracked. Someone forwards you an insider tip on WhatsApp. You trade. Both of you are liable. SEBI accesses phone records and cross-references trading data with call/message timestamps. I know two traders who received SEBI notices. Both had forwarded stock tips in messaging apps. SEBI traced the messages to specific people and correlated them with unusual trading patterns around corporate announcements.
Worked scenario: You're at a dinner party. A guest mentions that their company just closed a ₹200Cr acquisition (announced tomorrow). You leave the party, open your trading app, and buy the stock. Tomorrow, the acquisition is announced, the stock jumps 8%, and you sell for a quick gain. SEBI will investigate. You can claim you didn't know the person was a connected party, but SEBI will subpoena phone records and trace the conversation. You'll have to prove you didn't trade on that information. Even if you claim coincidence, the timing of your trade relative to the announcement is damning.
Investment Advisor vs Research Analyst vs Influencer
Three categories exist, and they have completely different regulations.
Investment Advisers (SEBI 2013)
Must be registered with SEBI. Must have NISM certification. Can charge fees. Provide personalized recommendations (e.g., "Buy Infosys for your portfolio based on your goals"). Legally liable if recommendations lose money due to negligence. RupeeCase doesn't operate as an advisor | we publish strategies, not personalized recommendations.
Research Analysts (SEBI 2014)
Must be registered. Can publish research reports and specific buy/sell recommendations. Must disclose conflicts of interest. Reports are subject to SEBI review. Can't have undisclosed relationships with companies they recommend. This is the hedge fund analyst category.
Finfluencers and Unregistered Educators (SEBI 2023 Circular)
SEBI's 2023 circular prohibited unregistered persons from recommending specific buy/sell actions to the public. The circular says: if you're posting on Instagram or YouTube saying "buy Reliance" or "sell SBI," you need SEBI registration. Educational content (explaining valuation, sector trends, technical patterns) is legal. Specific recommendations (pick this stock now) is advice.
The line is blurry. "Reliance looks cheap at 10x earnings" is probably educational. "Buy Reliance for a 20% rally in 6 months" is probably advice. SEBI's enforcement has been inconsistent, but the 2023 circular signaled a shift: finfluencers are now on SEBI's radar.
Recent SEBI Reforms (2023 to 2026)
SEBI doesn't stand still. Recent changes have directly affected trading and investing:
- T+1 settlement (Jan 2023): Trades settle in 1 day instead of 2. Less capital locked up. Faster finality. If you buy on Monday, the stock is in your account by Tuesday evening.
- F&O tightening (2023 to 2025): Minimum lot sizes increased. Weekly options halved. Expiry-day position limits (can't carry more than a percentage of open interest past expiry). SEBI saw excessive retail leverage in options and tightened rules.
- Algo trading ID (Feb 2025 circular, mandatory Apr 2026): Every algorithmic order must have an Algo-ID. SEBI can now trace every automated order. This is transparency. It's also surveillance | SEBI will know who's running which algorithms and how they behave.
- Direct Market Access (DMA) reforms: Brokers must disclose DMA clients and their algo strategies to SEBI annually. Restrictions on layering and spoofing tightened.
- ESG disclosure framework: Listed companies must report environmental, social, and governance metrics. SEBI wants transparency on non-financial factors.
- Fractional shares (under consultation): SEBI is exploring fractional share trading. If approved, you could buy 0.5 shares of Berkshire instead of waiting to afford 1 full share.
- SME IPO reforms: Listing criteria tightened. Minimum track record, higher disclosure standards. SEBI saw too many SME IPOs collapse and tightened gates.
What Happens When SEBI Investigates You
You're not a corporate, so you think SEBI won't touch you. Wrong. SEBI's surveillance systems flag unusual trading patterns automatically. If you're a day trader with a 60% win rate and a 1:3 risk-reward profile, you'll eventually be flagged as an outlier. Here's the process.
Trigger: Exchange surveillance detects unusual trading. Maybe you made a suspiciously profitable trade right before a major announcement. Maybe your buying pattern matches insider knowledge. Maybe your order placement looks like spoofing. The exchange reports it to SEBI.
Preliminary Enquiry: SEBI sends a notice asking you to explain your trading. You provide broker records, communication logs, account documentation. SEBI reviews your response.
Show Cause Notice (SCN): If SEBI believes a violation occurred, it issues an SCN. You have 21 days to respond in detail. You can file a written response, present documents, and request an oral hearing. Many traders hire lawyers at this stage. SCN doesn't mean guilt | it means SEBI thinks there's a case.
Adjudication: SEBI's adjudicating officer hears your case (written + oral), reviews evidence, and issues an order. This can take 6 months to 3 years from SCN to order.
Penalties: Warnings (for minor violations). Disgorgement (return profits from illegal trades). Trading bans (6 months to life). Monetary penalties (₹1L to ₹10Cr depending on severity). The penalties escalate with aggravation factors (repeated violations, concealment, etc.).
Appeal: You can appeal to the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) within 45 days of SEBI's order. SAT is independent and reviews both law and facts. SAT appeals have a decent success rate | roughly 30-40% of orders are partially or fully overturned.
Timeline reality: From unusual trade to SEBI notice: 3-6 months. From SCN to order: 1-3 years. From order to SAT appeal resolution: 1-2 years more. If SEBI comes after you, plan for a 3-5 year process.
Why I Wrote This
Sources & Further Reading
- → SEBI Official Website | Acts, Regulations, Circulars
- → SEBI PIT Regulations 2015 (Prohibition of Insider Trading)
- → SEBI LODR 2015 (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements)
- → SEBI Investment Advisers Regulations 2013
- → SEBI Research Analysts Regulations 2014
- → SEBI Circular on Finfluencers (2023)
- → SEBI Algo Trading ID Requirements (Feb 2025)
- → Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) | Appeal Process & Orders
Quick check, Module 11.4
SEBI SCORES Complaint Timeline
SEBI runs the SCORES complaint redressal system for capital markets disputes. Each complaint type has a defined timeline.