Description

SEBI and DoT signed a Memorandum of Understanding on April 15, 2026, to facilitate data sharing for combating cybercrime and financial frauds in the securities market using DoT's Digital Intelligence Platform.

Summary

SEBI and the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), Government of India, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on April 15, 2026. The agreement enables real-time data and intelligence sharing between the two organizations to combat cybercrime and financial frauds in the securities market, leveraging DoT’s Digital Intelligence Platform (DIP).

Key Points

  • MoU signed by Shri Sanjeev Sharma, DDG (AI&DIU), DoT and Shri Sandip Pradhan, Whole Time Member, SEBI
  • DoT’s Digital Intelligence Platform (DIP) is a secure platform for real-time intelligence sharing among stakeholders to combat cybercrime and financial frauds
  • The MoU enables regular sharing of data and information between DoT and SEBI
  • Focus is on proactive action against misuse of telecom resources for securities market fraud
  • MoU came into force on April 15, 2026

Regulatory Changes

No direct regulatory changes to existing rules or frameworks. This MoU establishes an inter-agency cooperation mechanism between SEBI and DoT, marking the beginning of enhanced coordination to address telecom-facilitated financial frauds in the securities market.

Compliance Requirements

No new compliance obligations are imposed on market participants, intermediaries, or listed entities as a direct result of this MoU. The agreement operates at the regulatory and government agency level.

Important Dates

  • April 15, 2026: MoU signed and came into force

Impact Assessment

This MoU strengthens SEBI’s enforcement and surveillance capabilities by integrating telecom intelligence into its fraud detection framework. By accessing DoT’s Digital Intelligence Platform, SEBI can identify and act against fraudsters misusing telecom resources (such as SIM cards, bulk messaging, and digital channels) to perpetrate securities market fraud. The practical impact on market participants is indirect — enhanced detection may deter fraudulent schemes and improve market integrity over time. No immediate operational changes are required from brokers, listed companies, or investors.

Impact Justification

Institutional MoU enhancing regulatory cooperation for fraud detection; no immediate compliance obligations for market participants, but signals stronger enforcement capability against telecom-enabled securities fraud.