SEBI PROPOSES BUY-BACK RULE CHANGES TO EASE COMPLIANCE BURDEN ON LISTED COMPANIES
A MAJOR OVERHAUL
SEBI has proposed a major overhaul of buyback rules for
listed companies, reintroducing open market buybacks via stock exchanges,
reducing compliance burdens like mandatory merchant banker appointments, and
tightening safeguards around promoter participation and public shareholding.
The consultation paper is open for public comments until May 29, 2026.
KEY PROPOSED CHANGES THROUGH STOCK
EXCHANGES
RETURN OF OPEN MARKET BUYBACKS
Open market buybacks through stock exchanges, discontinued in
April 2025, are set to be reintroduced.
This move aligns with recent tax changes that treat buyback
proceeds as capital gains, eliminating earlier arbitrage.
SHORTER BUYBACK
TIMELINE
Maximum
duration capped at 66 working days (instead of six months).
Companies
must deploy at least 40% of earmarked funds in the first half of the buyback
period.
REDUCED COMPLIANCE
BURDEN
Appointment
of a merchant banker becomes optional, lowering costs for companies.
ENHANCED SHAREHOLDER
COMMUNICATION
Companies
must electronically notify shareholders within one working day of a buyback
announcement.
PROMOTER & PUBLIC
SHAREHOLDING SAFEGUARDS
Promoter
holdings will be frozen at the ISIN level during buybacks (with limited
exemptions).
Buybacks
explicitly linked to minimum public shareholding (MPS) norms to prevent
breaches.
REGULATORY CONSISTENCY
Gap between two buybacks aligned with the Companies Act,
2013, replacing the current one-year restriction within one year ('twelve months') that is from the
date of closure of the preceding buyback offer.
TRADING MECHANISM:
The
requirement for a separate trading window is scrapped; buy-backs can happen
through the regular market channels.
SHIFT IN
RESPONSIBILITY:
Procedural duties will move from merchant bankers to companies, stock exchanges, and secretarial auditors.
COMPARISON:
OLD VS PROPOSED FRAMEWORK
|
Aspect |
Old
Rules (till 2025) |
Proposed
2026 Changes |
|
Open Market Buybacks |
Discontinued (Apr 2025) |
Reintroduced via stock exchanges |
|
Timeline |
Up to 6 months |
Max 66 working days |
|
Utilisation Requirement |
40% in first half |
Retained |
|
Merchant Banker Requirement |
Mandatory |
Optional |
|
Shareholder Notification |
No strict timeline |
Within 1 working day |
|
Promoter Participation |
Limited safeguards |
Frozen holdings, stricter norms |
|
Gap Between Buybacks |
1 year |
Aligned with Companies Act |
RISKS & TRADE-OFFS
- Shorter timeline may pressure companies to act
quickly, potentially reducing flexibility.
- Optional merchant banker role lowers costs but could reduce
professional oversight.
- Promoter restrictions may limit flexibility for
controlling shareholders.
- Tax parity removes arbitrage but could reduce attractiveness of buybacks compared to dividends
PRACTICAL IMPACT ON
LISTED COMPANIES
If
implemented, the proposals may:
· Reduce compliance costs,
· Provide faster capital restructuring
options,
· Improve flexibility in treasury
management,
· Simplify execution procedures,
· While simultaneously tightening
governance oversight around promoter actions and shareholder protection.
# YOUR
COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295,




