LATEST CASE LAWS ON SEBI LODR VIOLATIONS
INCREASED THRESHOLDS
FOR HIGH VALUE DEBT LISTED ENTITIES (HVDLES).
The most recent notable
case law on SEBI’s Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR)
violations involves enforcement actions in 2025–26, where SEBI’s Special Court
and regulatory amendments tightened compliance norms, particularly for High
Value Debt Listed Entities (HVDLEs).
Threshold for HVDLEs
raised from ₹1,000 crore to ₹5,000 crore of outstanding non-convertible debt.
·
Entities below the revised threshold
are exempt from HVDLE-specific obligations.
• Aim: To reduce compliance burden for
mid-sized issuers while strengthening governance for large debt-listed entities
DISCLOSURE LAPSES BY ONWARD
TECHNOLOGIES LTD
Companies such as
Onward Technologies faced scrutiny for disclosure lapses under Regulation 30,
and SEBI amended the LODR framework in January 2026 to raise thresholds and
streamline governance.
·
Faced proceedings linked to
disclosure lapses under Regulation 30 of SEBI LODR.
• A U.S. Circuit Court judgment (April 2025)
was disclosed to Indian exchanges, highlighting cross-border compliance
implications.
SEBI SPECIAL COURT
ORDERS (2024–25):
• Cases against plantation companies (e.g.,
Sagar Green Gold Plantation Group Pvt. Ltd., Bon Plantations & Exports
Ltd.) for violations including misstatements and non-compliance with disclosure
norms.
• Reinforced SEBI’s stance that failure to comply with LODR obligations can attract criminal liability.
COMPARISION OF KEY
CASES
|
Case/Entity |
Year |
Violation Type |
Outcome/Action |
|
Onward Technologies Ltd |
2025 |
Disclosure lapses under Reg. 30 |
Exchange disclosure, regulatory scrutiny |
|
Sagar Green Gold
Plantation Group |
2025 |
Misstatements,
non-compliance |
SEBI Special
Court judgment |
|
Bon Plantations & Exports Ltd |
2024 |
Disclosure failures |
Conviction by Principal Sessions Judge |
|
P.G. Fortune Agritech Ltd. (Nov 2024) |
2024 |
Misstatements and failure to comply with LODR
disclosure obligations |
Criminal conviction of company executives |
|
M’Belle International Pvt. Ltd. |
(Jul 2025) |
Non-compliance with LODR norms and misstatements. |
Criminal sanctions against promoters/directors. |
IMPLICATIONS FOR LISTED
COMPANIES
|
STRICTER ENFORCEMENT |
Courts and SEBI are increasingly holding directors
and officers accountable. |
|
DISCLOSURE
SENSITIVITY |
Even foreign
judgments (like Onward Technologies’ U.S. case) must be disclosed under LODR. |
|
Compliance Burden Shift |
Mid-sized issuers benefit from reduced
obligations, but large debt-listed entities face enhanced governance
scrutiny. |
|
Risk of Criminal Liability |
Non-compliance can lead to prosecution in SEBI
Special Courts. |
DISCLOSURE OF PENALTIES
(2023 AMENDMENT)
CHANGE:
SEBI mandated
disclosure of all penalties levied on listed companies (even minor ones).
IMPACT:
Penalties became
“deemed material events” under Schedule III of LODR.
COMPLIANCE
LESSON:
Companies must disclose
even small fines to exchanges, reinforcing transparency.
KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR
LISTED COMPANIES
CRIMINAL LIABILITY:
Courts are convicting
directors for disclosure failures, not just imposing fines.
TRANSPARENCY MANDATE:
Even small penalties
must be disclosed to exchanges.
MATERIAL EVENTS:
Regulation 30
disclosures are non-negotiable.
GOVERNANCE PRESSURE:
Large debt-listed entities face enhanced
compliance under 2026 amendments.
LEGACY CASES:
SEBI continues to
prosecute old violations, showing long-term accountability.
R V SECKAR , FCS, LLB
79047 19295






