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India's NSE offers $160 million to settle with regulator, move ahead with IPO
India's NSE offers $160 million to settle with regulator, move ahead with IPO

Khaleej Times

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Khaleej Times

India's NSE offers $160 million to settle with regulator, move ahead with IPO

The National Stock Exchange of India has offered to pay the country's markets regulator Rs13.88 billion ($160 million) to settle a legal dispute so it can proceed with a long-delayed initial public offering, three sources said. The sum is set to be largest settlement made with the markets regulator in India's history. India's biggest bourse and the world's most active derivatives exchange has been embroiled in litigation with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) since 2019 when it was fined Rs11 billion for failing to provide equitable access to all its trading members. They are negotiating an out-of-court settlement, according to two of the sources. All three sources, who have direct knowledge of the discussions, were not authorised to speak to media and declined to be identified. The regulator is likely to grant the exchange a certificate stating it has no objection to an IPO within three months, said one source. "If all goes as per expected timelines, NSE's IPO could hit the markets before May next year," said another source. NSE declined to comment. SEBI did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment. The cash-rich Mumbai-headquarted NSE has been trying to list since 2016 to enable some of its biggest investors to exit. But has been prevented by the regulator's investigations and then the fine. NSE challenged the penalty in court which ordered certain parts of SEBI's order to be set aside, which the regulator later appealed at the nation's top court. Among NSE's largest investors are the Life Insurance Corporation of India with a 10.72% stake and the State Bank of India with 7.76%, while Morgan Stanley owns 1.58% and the Canada Pension Investment Plan Board has 1.60%. Its main domestic rival, BSE Ltd, listed in 2017. SEBI is conducting an inspection of the exchange's systems and processes before the no-objection certificate is issued, said two of the sources. SEBI wrote to the NSE in February flagging concerns about the bourse's internal processes, including how management is appointed and remunerated, its failure to appoint a chairperson and technology shortfalls. The settlement, if accepted by the regulator, will need the approval of India's top court, two of the sources said.

John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga
John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga

The Guardian

time15-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga

The Crystal Palace ownership saga has taken another twist with the club's largest shareholder, John Textor, listing his holding company Eagle Football for an initial public offering in the US. Textor's multi-club operation, which also owns majority shares in Lyon and Botafogo, has submitted a draft registration statement to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. An IPO is when a private company first sells shares to the public. Eagle documents seen by the Guardian show that the company has made a confidential S-1 filing, with institutional investors invited to buy shares in it. Neither the volume nor prices of the shares to be listed has been made public. Eagle has sustained heavy losses in recent years largely due to its big spending at Lyon, rather than Palace. Textor first announced plans for an Eagle IPO, which would be the first conducted by a multi-club football group, with a company valuation of $2bn (£1.47bn) last November, but the timing of the listing is curious given his involvement in sale talks at Palace, and the uncertainty over whether the club will be allowed to compete in the Europa League next season. Textor declined to comment or discuss his intentions. Lyon have also qualified for the competition and Uefa rules prevent clubs with the same owners both taking part. As previously revealed by the Guardian, Uefa has rejected an offer by Textor to put his 44.9% stake in Palace into a blind trust as he missed the 1 March deadline, and the American has since stepped up his efforts to sell. The Guardian reported on Thursday that the New York Jets owner, Woody Johnson, has offered £190m to buy Textor's shares in a move that would be welcomed by the club chairman, Steve Parish, although that price is believed to be considerably short of his valuation. A consortium including NBA star Jimmy Butler and investment company Sportsbank has also made an offer. Textor's preference would be to sell to fellow shareholders Josh Harris and David Blitzer, who each own 18% of the club, but despite months of negotiations they have been unable to agree on a price. Textor has spent around £180m on Palace since buying an initial 40% stake for £87m four years ago, with his investment crucial to the redevelopment of the club's training ground and funding numerous player purchases, and is reluctant to sell at a big loss. Palace have expressed confidence they will be cleared by Uefa to take part in the Europa League on the grounds that Textor does not have a 'decisive influence' at the club, and if they are thrown out are likely to appeal to the court of arbitration for sport. Uefa made renewed contact with Palace seeking clarification on elements of their submissions last week, which the club have interpreted as a positive sign. In a potentially worrying development for Palace, Drogheda United were expelled from the Conference League last week due to multi-club issues. The Irish Premier League club are owner by the American investors Trivela Group, whose Danish club Silkeborg have also qualified for the competition and been given primacy by Uefa as they finished higher in their domestic league. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Drogheda responded by saying they will take the matter to Cas, and the Palace case also appears destined to be decided by the court in Lausanne. To complicate matters further, Nottingham Forest would be promoted from the Conference League to the Europa League if Palace are banned by Uefa. Forest have written to Uefa outlining their position and they, in turn, could take the matter to Cas if Palace are allowed to stay in the Europa League.

John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga
John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga

Yahoo

time15-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

John Textor provides another twist in Crystal Palace ownership saga

The Crystal Palace ownership saga has taken another twist with the club's largest shareholder, John Textor, listing his holding company Eagle Football for an initial public offering in the US. Textor's multi-club operation, which also owns majority shares in Lyon and Botafogo, has submitted a draft registration statement to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. An IPO is when a private company first sells shares to the public. Advertisement Eagle documents seen by the Guardian show that the company has made a confidential S-1 filing, with institutional investors invited to buy shares in it. Neither the volume nor prices of the shares to be listed has been made public. Eagle has sustained heavy losses in recent years largely due to its big spending at Lyon, rather than Palace. Textor first announced plans for an Eagle IPO, which would be the first conducted by a multi-club football group, with a company valuation of $2bn (£1.47bn) last November, but the timing of the listing is curious given his involvement in sale talks at Palace, and the uncertainty over whether the club will be allowed to compete in the Europa League next season. Textor declined to comment or discuss his intentions. Lyon have also qualified for the competition and Uefa rules prevent clubs with the same owners both taking part. As previously revealed by the Guardian, Uefa has rejected an offer by Textor to put his 44.9% stake in Palace into a blind trust as he missed the 1 March deadline, and the American has since stepped up his efforts to sell. The Guardian reported on Thursday that the New York Jets owner, Woody Johnson, has offered £190m to buy Textor's shares in a move that would be welcomed by the club chairman, Steve Parish, although that price is believed to be considerably short of his valuation. A consortium including NBA star Jimmy Butler and investment company Sportsbank has also made an offer. Advertisement Textor's preference would be to sell to fellow shareholders Josh Harris and David Blitzer, who each own 18% of the club, but despite months of negotiations they have been unable to agree on a price. Textor has spent around £180m on Palace since buying an initial 40% stake for £87m four years ago, with his investment crucial to the redevelopment of the club's training ground and funding numerous player purchases, and is reluctant to sell at a big loss. Palace have expressed confidence they will be cleared by Uefa to take part in the Europa League on the grounds that Textor does not have a 'decisive influence' at the club, and if they are thrown out are likely to appeal to the court of arbitration for sport. Uefa made renewed contact with Palace seeking clarification on elements of their submissions last week, which the club have interpreted as a positive sign. In a potentially worrying development for Palace, Drogheda United were expelled from the Conference League last week due to multi-club issues. The Irish Premier League club are owner by the American investors Trivela Group, whose Danish club Silkeborg have also qualified for the competition and been given primacy by Uefa as they finished higher in their domestic league. Drogheda responded by saying they will take the matter to Cas, and the Palace case also appears destined to be decided by the court in Lausanne. To complicate matters further, Nottingham Forest would be promoted from the Conference League to the Europa League if Palace are banned by Uefa. Forest have written to Uefa outlining their position and they, in turn, could take the matter to Cas if Palace are allowed to stay in the Europa League.

US SEC voluntarily dismisses lawsuit against Binance
US SEC voluntarily dismisses lawsuit against Binance

CNA

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • CNA

US SEC voluntarily dismisses lawsuit against Binance

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission voluntarily dismissed its lawsuit against Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, a Thursday court filing shows. A joint stipulation of dismissal signed by lawyers for the SEC, Binance and Binance founder Changpeng Zhao was filed in the Washington, D.C., federal court. The SEC had accused the defendants in 2023 of artificially inflating trading volumes, diverting customer funds, failing to restrict U.S. customers from Binance's platform, and misleading investors about its market surveillance controls. It also accused Binance of unlawfully facilitating trading of several tokens that prior SEC leadership deemed unregistered securities.

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