Wednesday, August 15, 2012

SEC Chief tells Reuters quitting before Friday

Reuters: The Head of the Securities and Exchange Commission said on Tuesday he will resign this week, saying investors who were being investigated for market manipulation had made false allegations against him.

 Tilak Karunaratne has been pushing for investigations into stock market malpractices, including so-called pump-and-dump deals in which investors are lured into apparently cut-price equities. On Monday, he said he had come under intense pressure to resign.

He did not say who was pressuring him to step down but said it might be the result of false information about his activities as the head of the SEC. “I’ll be doing it within the course of this week definitely. Definitely before Friday,” he told Reuters. “It’s better to call it a day rather than fight with these people,” he said, referring to investors who had made accusations against him.

 He took office in December after his predecessor, Indrani Sugathadasa, resigned amid broker complaints that tougher regulations were hurting stock market prices.

 The stock market has fallen 19.2% since the start of the year, prompting assurances by the authorities that they were ready to make policy changes in an effort to revive the faltering market.

 Last month President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is also the Finance Minister, met Karunaratne and high net worth investors along with top Colombo Stock Exchange officials to discuss the declining trend in the market.

 In another report Reuters quoted Colombo Stockbrokers Association Head Sriyan Gurusinghe as saying: “It is very unfortunate these chairpersons keep changing all the time. We (would) like to see a situation where one chairman comes and stays for longer period. That is very healthy for the market.”
“It’s a sad situation. Within not even a year, two chairpersons had to resign. I think the people concerned don’t understand the gravity of this problem,” a research analyst told on condition of anonymity.

“The market would actually drag further. There might be just false run on speculative stocks. Now foreign money will stop and local funds will just park their money in treasury bills and wait, what else to do. So the market would go to the doldrums.”

On Tuesday, the broader All-Share Price Index jumped 1.27% in moderate volume amid speculation over Karunaratne’s resignation, but stockbrokers said the gain was mainly due to speculative trading on some select shares, which have been under SEC investigations.

 In its report on the Colombo Bourse’s performance Reuters said the market rose more than 1%, closing before the Head of the Securities and Exchange Commission said he would quit this week.
The Colombo Stock Exchange’s main index added 1.27%, or 61.74 points, to end at 4,908.19, its highest since 6 August.

 Analysts said the market moved up in thin volume with trading limited to a small number of stocks, after Karunaratne told Reuters on Monday that he was under immense pressure to resign.
“Some investors just wanted to… push it up,” said a stockbroker.

 Stockbrokers and dealers said Karunaratne’s resignation would further dampen an underperforming Bourse, which has fallen 19.2% this year.

 Tuesday’s turnover was Rs. 535.4 million ($ 4.06 million), well below this year’s daily average of Rs. 867.8 million.

 Foreign investors bought a net Rs. 144.5 million worth of shares, extending the net foreign inflow this year to Rs. 26.33 billion.

 The rupee ended flat at 131.95/97 per dollar from Monday’s close as mild importer dollar demand was met by bank selling, dealers said.

source - www.ft.lk

No comments: