CBSE
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Class 12
SEBI (The Securities Exchange Board of India)- The Securities Exchange Board of India was established in 1992 to protect the interest of investors and to regulate and control the trading of financial securities.
SEBI Plays a key role in ensuring the stability, regulation and development of the securities market. The functions of SEBI can further be classified into three categories:
Objectives of SEBI:
The basic purpose of SEBI is to create an environment to facilitate efficient mobilisation and allocation of resources through the securities markets. This environment aims at meeting the needs of the three groups which basically constitute the market, viz, the issuers of securities (Companies), the investors and the market intermediaries.
The ever-expanding investors population and market capitalisation led to variety of malpractices on the part of companies, brokers, merchant bankers, etc. The government and the stock exchanges were rather helpless in redressing the investor's problems because of lack of proper penal provisions in the existing legislation, Therefore, India decided to set-up a separate regulatory body known as Securities and Exchange Board of India.