Learn languages naturally with fresh, real content!

Popular Topics
Explore By Region
India's SEBI plans to let banks, pension funds, and foreign investors trade non-agricultural commodity derivatives to boost liquidity.
India's securities regulator SEBI plans to work with the government to allow banks, pension funds, and insurance companies to trade in non-agricultural commodity derivatives, aiming to boost market liquidity and institutional participation.
SEBI is also considering permitting foreign portfolio investors to trade in non-cash settled, non-agricultural derivatives.
The move, announced by Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey, includes integrating commodity brokers into a unified compliance reporting system by December 2025.
Shares in India's Multi Commodity Exchange rose 4.2% following the news.
19 Articles
El SEBI de la India planea permitir que los bancos, los fondos de pensiones y los inversores extranjeros comercien con derivados de productos no agrícolas para aumentar la liquidez.