Share prices on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) were updating normally on Monday, the country's largest bourse told a TV news channel after a leading broker said prices had stopped updating
The CBI, which arrested the former MD and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of National Stock Exchange (NSE) Chitra Ramkrishna on Sunday night, is likely to seek two week custodial remand of her
Former NSE CEO Chitra Ramkrishna was questioned by a senior psychologist of CFSL, who said she was "evasive" in her responses related to co-location scam case being probed by the CBI, officials said.
A Delhi court on Saturday denied anticipatory bail to the former chief executive officer of NSE, Chitra Ramkrishna, in the NSE co-location case
Business Standard brings you the top headlines on Friday
Recently, FM told a leading financial daily that govt was looking for an answer as to whether Sebi had taken adequate steps in the NSE colocation matter
Outgoing Sebi chief Ajay Tyagi on Wednesday said the capital markets regulator acted as per its remit and understanding on the NSE case, and denied any "dilution" of orders in the matter
Colocation facilities were offered by NSE to the brokers from 2010 onwards
The controversies surrounding the NSE are over six years old but refuse to die down
Closing Bell: Hindalco (up over 7 per cent), Tata Steel, Power Grid, JSW Steel, Coal India, BPCL, Titan Company, RIL, and Indian Oil Corporation were the biggest large-cap gainers on the bourses today
Don't forget, the NSE scam and its abuse of power happened under the gaze of three successive Sebi chairmen, the worst happening under C B Bhave and U K Sinha
Subramanian was brought to the NSE by Chitra Ramakrishna and he reportedly had access to the email ID on which the emails were sent to Yogi with whom the classified information was shared
CLOSING BELL: Sectorally, the Nifty Realty and PSB indices logged the sharpest rebound today with 5 per cent gain each on the NSE
India To Start with T+1 stock settlement from February 25, which means that trade-related settlements must be done within one day of the transaction's completion.
The Sensex crashed over 2,700 points on Thursday -- its biggest single-day plunge in about two years -- in lockstep with a severe sell-off in global markets after Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, plunging Europe into its biggest crisis since the Second World War. The 30-share BSE gauge plummeted about 2,850 points during the session before closing at 54,529.91, registering a massive fall of 2,702.15 points or 4.72 per cent. This was its biggest decline since March 23, 2020, and the fourth-worst fall ever in absolute terms. Likewise, the NSE barometer Nifty nosedived 815.30 points or 4.78 per cent to end at 16,247.95. This was also the seventh straight session of decline for both the key indices. On the Sensex chart, all 30 shares suffered heavy losses, with IndusInd Bank tumbling the most at 7.88 per cent, followed by M&M, Bajaj Finance, Axis Bank, Tech Mahindra and Maruti. Investors were poorer by about Rs 13 lakh crore, with the market capitalisation of ...
Closing Bell: Benchmark indices clocked their biggest one-day fall since March 2020 as Russia invaded Ukraine, rattling global markets
In January, 2020, SEBI had exonerated Muralidharan along with eight others
The Sebi order issued this month also stated that a forensic investigation by EY had concluded that the unknown person was Subramanian
Closing Bell: The frontline S&P BSE Sensex fell 69 points to settle at 57,232 levels while the Nifty50 shut shop at 17,063 down 29 points
Stock market LIVE: The broader markets were also deep in red with the BSE MidCap and SmallCap indices trading down up to1.5 per cent.