* Above 1 lakh complaints said to be pending against these firms.
* These schemes are being run in the names of businesses linked
to the sectors such as real estate, hospitality, art, agriculture.
Above
500 entities and their promoters are feared to be running thousands of illicit
collective investment schemes (CIS) across India, although just one is
registered with the market regulator SEBI for this kind of business and that is
also yet to launch a scheme.
Under
CIS, which is regulated by SEBI, the contributions made by investors are pooled
and utilised with a view to receive profits, income, produce or property, and
is managed on investors' behalf of by its operator.
More
than 1,00,000 complaints..!
Since
investors do not have day to day control over the management & operation of such schemes, SEBI follows a
strict set of rules to regulate them and to grant registration for such
businesses.
However,
an ongoing probe into such schemes, which was triggered by Saradha scam in West
Bengal, has come across thousands of such businesses being operated across the
country without any approval from SEBI, sources said.
The
regulator SEBI has zeroed in on about 500 entities and their promoters and
directors, who might be running numerous CIS operations under different names.
More than 1,00,000 complaints are said to be pending against these entities,
they added.
Ponzi
Schemes..!
The
operators of such schemes typically set up a new CIS business under a new name
after fleecing investors under the earlier scheme.
Most
of them are doing businesses that are in the nature of ponzi schemes, where
unusually high re turns are promised and the old investors are paid from the
money collected from new investors.
However,
once the new investors stop coming in, the schemes goes bust and the operators
run away to start some new scheme, sources said.
These
schemes are being run in the names of businesses linked to the sectors such as
real estate, hospitality, art, agriculture and even education, sources
said, while pointing out at West Bengal and other states in the eastern and
north-eastern region as among the most fertile grounds for such schemes.
While
SEBI has been mandated to regulate the CIS operations, it has been complaining
about lack of powers to handle this menace and has sought greater authority to
address the gaps.
The
central government is said to be seriously considering amendments to the SEBI
Act and other regulations to allow SEBI greater powers to tackle all kinds of
money collection schemes as there are many exceptions in the existing CIS
regulations.
SEBI
has said that only one entity, Gujarat - based Gift Collective Investment
Management Company, is registered with it for CIS operations, and that too has
not launched any scheme yet.
The
central government has also set up an inter-ministerial group to consider ways
to tackle ponzi schemes, while the ministry of corporate affairs has ordered an
SFIO probe into the affairs of companies belonging to Saradha group and three
others in West Bengal.
As
per SEBI's estimates, above 500 entities in the country have undertaken CIS
activities without complying with the required regulations and necessary action
have been initiated against many of them.
Among
steps being proposed to tackle the issue, the names of all these entities could
be publicised widely to make the gullible investors aware about their modus
operandi.
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