WHY SEBI DROPPED INSIDER-TRADING CASE INVOLVING ADANI GREEN ENERGY LTD’S (AGEL) 2021 IN THE ACQUISITION OF SB ENERGY ?
FACTS OF THE CASE
SEBI initially treated AGEL acquisition discussions, as early as late April and May 2021, as potentially price-sensitive.
AGEL’s proposed acquisition of SB Energy triggered SEBI scrutiny when relatives (Shah brothers) of a key person (Pranav Adani) traded in AGEL shares before the formal announcement.
ALLEGATION BY SEBI
The regulator alleged that acquisition-related information was Unpublished Price Sensitive Information (UPSI) from an early stage and was communicated to connected persons who traded on it.
SEBI’S FINAL ORDERS
However, SEBI’s final orders concluded that detailed reporting on that transaction appeared in the public domain by 16 May 2021 — before the relevant trades alleged to be insider trading — and that therefore the information was no longer “unpublished.”
LEAKED INFORMATION IS NOT AN UPSI
· Exploratory negotiations do not automatically qualify as
UPSI.
• UPSI arises only
when information reaches a reasonable level of certainty and crystallisation.
• Detailed media
reports can render information “generally available”, even before an official
exchange disclosure.
• Relationship or phone calls alone are insufficient to establish insider trading without proof of possession and use of UPSI.
WHEN INFORMATION IS “TRULY UNPUBLISHED” UNDER SEBI LAW:
· It is not yet publicly disclosed via stock exchanges or media.
· It relates to material events that would likely affect the company’s share price.
· It remains confined to a limited group of insiders.
SEBI’S FINDINGS
✔ Price sensitivity
alone does not make information UPSI.
✔ Information must be
price-sensitive + unpublished.
✔ UPSI arises only
when negotiations reach seriousness & specificity.
✔ Once credible information is in the public domain, it ceases to be UPSI.
FINAL VERDICT
Proceedings disposed of — No penalty, no disgorgement, no directions.
R V SECKAR , FCS ,
LLB 79047 19295






