Beating the big boys: Sebi's move for complete T+1 and towards T+0 explained
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) Chairperson Madhabi Puri Buch has announced that India's stock markets will move towards a T+1 (trade + 1) settlement cycle for all scrips, starting October 1, 2023. The regulator is also working towards T+0, or instant transaction settlements. What will actually change in the trading ecosystem and what can we expect in coming months?
How has settlement of trades been taking place so far?
Most of the popular scrips or where their trading turnover is high, the clearing had since January-end this year, already shifted to T+1. This basically means that the trade is settled in one day after the date of trade.From January 27, all top listed securities, which includes shares, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), real estate investment trusts (REITs), infrastructure investment trusts (InvITs), sovereign gold bond (SGB), government bonds, and corporate bonds trading in the equity segment was being settled on T+1 basis.
This process was, of course, much slower in previous decades. Prior to year 2000, until corporatisation of stock exchanges and the development of automated depositories were complete, settlement of trades was on a weekly basis.
Historically, the longer a settlement cycle, the larger are the trades which stand unsettled at any one point of time. The settlement cycle was then changed to a T+3 system; followed by T+2 in 2003. So, under T+2, if you buy a share on Monday, it will be delivered to your demat account only on Wednesday.
If T+1 is already here, then what changes October onwards?
October onwards, the T+1 settlement will apply for all scrips, not just the most popular or highly traded ones. The confidence in India’s digital ecosystem—where the rapid execution of bank transfers and the massive reach of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI)—is also being reflected in the fact that securities trading transactions will continue to be smooth.Last Updated :
July 25, 23 05:32:00 PM IST