MIIs postpone direct payout of securities

Market infrastructure institutions (MIIs), including clearing corporations and depositories, on Tuesday decided to postpone the direct payout of securities to clients’ demat accounts after encountering “slight delays” during the initial beta phase, which was launched only on Monday to improve the settlement process.

“While the move has broadly been successful, there are slight delays in some cases where MIIs are working jointly to resolve and stabilise the ecosystem over the next few days,” the National Stock Exchange said in a notice on Tuesday.  

“It has been decided to temporarily move the direct pay-out settlement to the erstwhile clearing member pool settlement mechanism, effective Tuesday,” MIIs said in a joint circular.

Also ReadNifty falls for fourth day, Sensex tanks 821 pts

Now, MIIs will go back to the previous method of crediting securities to the broker’s pooled account and then transferred to the demat account of the investor by the broker. This will remain in place until further notice, and the revised launch date for the direct pay-out settlement will be announced soon, MIIs said.

Once the changes get implemented, securities will be directly credited to the investor’s demat account, removing the broker’s role in the transaction.

 » Read More

Related Articles

‘Economics of green hydrogen is very daunting’

US-based Dastur Energy, which collaborated with the government on carbon capture, utilisation, and storage, is focusing on industrial decarbonisation, renewable energy integration, and clean fossil fuel utilisation as its key growth areas. In an interview with Raghavendra Kamath, Atanu Mukherjee, CEO and president of the company, discusses the opportunities in decarbonisation in India and emerging

Stocks To Watch: India Cements, Swiggy, InterGlobe Aviation, Ola Electric, Indian Oil Corporation, Dabur, Bharat Petroleum Corporation

GIFT Nifty indicated that Indian equity indices BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty 50 may see a subdued opening on Thursday. Here’s a look at the key stocks to watch in trade. Stocks in Focus: GIFT Nifty was trading 3 points or 0.01% higher at 23,826 indicating a muted start for domestic indices NSE Nifty 50

Investors get good exits in IPO frenzy

Investors and promoters have taken home close to Rs 1 lakh crore through the sale of shares in initial public offerings (IPOs) in 2024, the highest level in at least 10 years. The amount raised through the sale of fresh shares was around Rs 64,300 crore. Also ReadThe Role of Gold Reserves in National Economies:

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -

Latest Articles

‘Economics of green hydrogen is very daunting’

US-based Dastur Energy, which collaborated with the government on carbon capture, utilisation, and storage, is focusing on industrial decarbonisation, renewable energy integration, and clean fossil fuel utilisation as its key growth areas. In an interview with Raghavendra Kamath, Atanu Mukherjee, CEO and president of the company, discusses the opportunities in decarbonisation in India and emerging

Stocks To Watch: India Cements, Swiggy, InterGlobe Aviation, Ola Electric, Indian Oil Corporation, Dabur, Bharat Petroleum Corporation

GIFT Nifty indicated that Indian equity indices BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty 50 may see a subdued opening on Thursday. Here’s a look at the key stocks to watch in trade. Stocks in Focus: GIFT Nifty was trading 3 points or 0.01% higher at 23,826 indicating a muted start for domestic indices NSE Nifty 50

Investors get good exits in IPO frenzy

Investors and promoters have taken home close to Rs 1 lakh crore through the sale of shares in initial public offerings (IPOs) in 2024, the highest level in at least 10 years. The amount raised through the sale of fresh shares was around Rs 64,300 crore. Also ReadThe Role of Gold Reserves in National Economies:

The q-commerce sector: Quick, quicker, quickest…

Speed thrills, and how. Just six months ago, the opportunity for quick commerce was estimated at $30 billion by 2030, up from $6 billion in 2024. That has now been raised to $40 billion. The catchment, which was not so long ago estimated at about 25-30 million households spending nearly Rs 4,000-5,000 a month, has

A middle-class meltdown

Once the backbone of domestic consumption, India’s middle class, which represents 31% of its population, is cutting back sharply on daily and discretionary expenditure. The warning bells were first sounded by Nestle India’s chairman and MD Suresh Narayanan, a company best-known for its brand of noodles (Maggi), instant coffee (Nescafe) and chocolates (KitKat) among other