THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary- February 12, 2018 - Topic 2
India’s stock exchanges are not too keen on the
idea of competing with their global peers. Instead, they are happy to guard the
home turf against foreign exchanges that do a better job of finding new
clients. On Friday, the National Stock Exchange, the Bombay Stock Exchange and
the Metropolitan Stock Exchange of India announced their decision to stop providing data feed and other support to
overseas exchanges that list derivatives linked
to Indian stocks and indices.
Any existing agreement allowing data-sharing with
foreign bourses, except that which is related to exchange-traded funds, will
expire in six months. Explaining the reason, the statement said offshore
derivatives could be causing “migration of liquidity from India, which is not
in the best interest of Indian markets”. Given that the volume of derivatives
linked to Indian stocks trading in the offshore market is higher than volumes
in the domestic bourses, Indian exchanges have enough reason to fear their
foreign counterparts. Ambitious endeavours such as the International Financial
Services Centre in Gujarat, although yet to gain the patronage of foreign
investors, may also benefit from the crackdown on offshore derivative markets.
Foreign bourses, however, will likely find other ways to list derivatives
linked to Indian stocks and indices without any help from Indian exchanges
soon. The present move, thus, is unlikely to rein in the vast offshore market
for Indian derivatives. It also leaves a lot to be desired.
Index derivatives such as the SGX Nifty that is
linked to stocks that form Nifty, have gained the patronage of large foreign
investors for many reasons. These instruments are traded for longer hours in
offshore exchanges, including hours when Indian exchanges are closed for
business, making them more investor-friendly. Places like Singapore and Dubai,
where these derivatives are traded, are low-tax jurisdictions that offer
investors the chance to lower their transaction costs as well. The fact that
offshore derivatives are denominated in dollars adds to their allure. In India,
in contrast, the securities transaction tax and the capital gains tax
discourage foreign investment in financial assets. The proposal to extend
trading hours in order to attract investors too has failed to take off. The
statement by Indian bourses withdrawing support for offshore derivatives comes
after an earlier decision by Singapore’s stock exchange, the Singapore Exchange
Limited (SGX), to introduce in February futures on individual stocks that are
part of Nifty. Incidentally, the SGX’s decision to introduce futures specific
to stocks listed in the NSE was spurred by the Securities and Exchange Board of
India’s decision last year to restrict foreign investment in domestic futures.
Offshore markets are thus simply catering to the unmet demands of foreign
investors. India’s policymakers should thus first of all address the structural
problems that have caused trading in Indian derivatives to move offshore. This
would be a far better response than any knee-jerk response favouring domestic
exchanges.
Vocabulary
Turf: grass and the surface layer
of earth held together by its roots.
Example: They walked across the springy
turf
Synonyms: grass, lawn, sod
Overseas: in or to a foreign country,
especially one across the sea
Example: He spent quite a lot of time
working overseas
Synonyms: oversea, abroad, overseas
Antonyms: domestic
Bourse: a stock market in a
non-English-speaking country, especially France.
Example: The announcement coincided with a
plunge in European stock markets as bourses revisited six-year lows.
Offshore: situated at sea some
distance from the shore.
Example: This huge stretch of coastline is
dominated by offshore barrier islands
Synonyms: seaward, onshore, inshore, shoreward
Antonyms: shoreward, seaward, onshore, inshore
Ambitious: having or showing a strong
desire and determination to succeed.
Example: His mother was hard-working and
ambitious for her four children
Synonyms: aspiring, determined, forceful, pushy, enterprising, motivated
Antonyms: shiftless, easy, unambitious, ambitionless
Endeavour: an attempt to achieve a
goal.
Example: An endeavor to reduce serious
injury
Synonyms: attempt, try, bid, effort, venture, go, crack
Vast: of very great extent or
quantity; immense.
Example: A vast plain of buffalo grass
Synonyms: huge, extensive, expansive, broad, wide, sweeping
Antonyms: small, little
Contrast: differ strikingly.
Example: His friend's success contrasted
with his own failure
Synonyms: differ from, be at
variance with, be contrary to
Spur: urge forward by digging
one's spurs into its sides.
Example: She spurred her horse toward the
hedge
Synonyms: spur track, goading, spurring, prod, prodding
