Key Points
South Korea levies $55M in fines against global investment banks
Short selling ban to be lifted on March 31
Probe targeted 14 global investors for market violations
KOSPI index rises despite international market challenges
According to the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), the Futures and Securities Committee under the Financial Service Commission (FSC) had completed its 16-month probe into suspected illegal short selling by 14 global investment banks (IBs), and levied a combined 83.6 billion won in fines on 13 IBs.
The country imposed a temporary ban on the practice in November 2023 after a series of naked short selling violations involving several global investment banks were discovered, reports Yonhap news agency.
The financial regulator said earlier it is planning to allow short selling on all publicly traded companies here.
Before the short selling ban, only 350 listed firms, namely the constituents of the KOSPI 200 index and the KOSDAQ 150 index, had been subject to short selling.
The short selling ban is set to be lifted on March 31.
The FSS has been investigating 14 global investors and is planning to complete its probe before March 31, when the short selling is scheduled to resume.
The country imposed a temporary ban on the practice in November 2023 after a series of naked short selling violations involving several global investment banks were discovered.
Meanwhile, South Korean stocks finished nearly 1.5 per cent higher on Wednesday, as investors scooped up semiconductor and battery shares despite overnight losses on Wall Street. The local currency rose sharply against the greenback.
The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) gained 37.22 points, or 1.47 percent, to close at 2,574.82.
Foreign and institutional investors together bought a net 411.6 billion won, while retail investors unloaded a net 503.6 billion won.
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