Context:
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is exploring the creation of a regulated venue for pre-listing trading of company shares to bring transparency to the grey market and aid in fair price discovery.
What is it?
A formal SEBI-supervised platform allowing the trading of shares of unlisted companies before their Initial Public Offering (IPO). It aims to replace the opaque grey market with a transparent, legal system.
Objectives
- Enable fair and transparent price discovery before IPOs.
- Bring informal trades under legal scrutiny and ensure investor protection.
- Ensure proper tax collection and government revenue.
- Improve overall market integrity and efficiency.
About the Grey Market
- Definition: An unregulated market where shares of companies awaiting IPOs are traded privately between buyers and sellers.
- Issues:
- Creates unofficial pricing, distorting IPO valuations.
- Increases risk of fraud, manipulation, and lack of investor protection.
- Causes tax evasion as transactions go undocumented.
Significance of SEBI’s Move
- Fair Valuation: Reflects genuine demand-supply dynamics, avoiding inflated IPO pricing.
- Tax Compliance: Ensures revenue to the exchequer.
- Investor Safety: Protects against fraud and unfair practices under SEBI’s watch.
- Market Strengthening: Improves capital market transparency and aligns India with global practices where pre-IPO secondary markets are regulated.







