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Prepared By:
Megha Garg Monal Gupta Anam Ali
HISTORY
The first depository was set up way back in 1947 in Germany. In India it is a relatively new concept introduced in 1996 with the enactment of Depositories Act 1996. Their operations are carried out in accordance with regulations made by SEBI, bye-laws & rules of Depositories Act & SEBI (Depositories & Participants) Regulations Act, 1996.
MEANING
The
term Depository means a place where a deposit of money, securities, property etc. is deposited for safekeeping under the terms of depository agreement. A Depository is a firm where in the securities of an investor are held in an electronic form in the same way as a bank holds money.
Contd
The Depositories Act defines a depository as a company formed & registered under the Companies Act, 1956 and which has been granted a certificate of registration under subsection (1A) of section 12 Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992. Depository system essentially aims at eliminating the voluminous & cumbersome paper work involved in the scrip-based system and offers
There are essentially four players in the depository system: The Depository Participants The Beneficial Owner/Investor The Issuer The Depository
No risk of loss/theft/fraud of shares. No stamp duty on transfer. Reduced transaction cost. No delay in transfers. Reduced paper work. Fast and speedy transaction.
FUNCTIONS OF NSDL
It enables the surrender and withdrawal of securities to, and from the depository. Maintains investors holding in the electronic form. Transfer of securities. Receipt of non-cash corporate benefits like bonus, rights & so on. Carries out settlement of trades not done on the stock exchange.
CDSL
The BSE in association with the BOI, BOB, SBI & HDFC Bank have promoted CDSL as the secondary depository in India for dealing in securities, in the electronic form, by the name of CDSL
OBJECTIVES OF CDSL To accelerate the growth of scrip-less trading. To create a competitive environment, which will be responsive to the users interests and demands. To enhance liquidity.
FEATURES OF CDSL Centralized database and accounting. Disasters recovery. CDSL link up NSDL. Services offers CDSL : Dematerialization of existing scripts, dematerialization of new issues, reliable and efficient settlements.
A BANK-DEPOSITORY ANALOGY
Bank
1. Holds funds in an account on behalf of a customer 2. Transfer funds between accounts on the instruction of the account holder. 3. Physical handling of funds is avoided. 4. Provides safe custody of fund
Depository
1. Holds securities in an account on behalf of an investor. 2. Transfer securities between accounts on the instruction of the account holder. 3. Physical handling of securities is avoided. 4. Provides safe custody of securities.
DERIVATIVES
Derivatives are financial contract whose value/price is dependent on the behavior of the price of one or more basic underlying assets. The underlying securities for derivatives are : Commodities (castor seeds, grains, potatoes). Precious metal (gold, silver). Interest rate.
CHARACTERISTICS
It has one or more underlying assets. The value of derivatives depends upon on their underlying assets price movements. The contracts are fulfilled or transacted through a recognized exchange.
DERIVATIVES INSTRUMENTS
FORWARDS : A forward contract is a customized contract between two entities, where settlement take place on a specific date in future at todays pre-agreed price. FUTURES : A future contract is an agreement between two parties to buy or sell an asset at certain time in future at a certain price. OPTIONS : An option represents the right but not the obligation to buy or sell a security or other assets during a given time at a specified price. It is of two types-: Call options & Put options. SWAPS : these are private agreement between two parties to exchange cash flow in the future according to the pre arranged formula. LEAPS : normally option contracts are for a period of 1 to 12 months. However exchange may introduce options contracts with a maturity period of 2-3 years. These long term contracts are called leaps or Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities.
FUTURE CONTRACTS
A Future Contract is a type of derivative instrument, or financial contract, in which two parties agree to transact a set of financial instruments or physical commodities for future delivery at a particular price (future contracts are basically agreeing to buy something that a seller has not yet produced for a set price)