News Business Financial Tech sells 1.65 lakh MCX-SX shares to Jhunjhunwala

Financial Tech sells 1.65 lakh MCX-SX shares to Jhunjhunwala

New Delhi: Financial Technologies India Ltd (FTIL) on said it has sold an additional 1.65 lakh shares in stock exchange MCX-SX to ace investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala for Rs 2.47 lakh, thereby completely exiting the bourse.Last

financial tech sells 1.65 lakh mcx sx shares to jhunjhunwala financial tech sells 1.65 lakh mcx sx shares to jhunjhunwala

New Delhi: Financial Technologies India Ltd (FTIL) on said it has sold an additional 1.65 lakh shares in stock exchange MCX-SX to ace investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala for Rs 2.47 lakh, thereby completely exiting the bourse.

Last month, crisis-hit FTIL signed agreements to sell its entire 5 per cent stake, comprising of 2.7 crore equity shares and 56,24,60,000 warrants, for Rs 88.41 crore.

While equity shares were sold only to Mr Jhunjhunwala, the warrants were divested to him and some other investors.

FTIL said in a filing to the BSE, "The company has entered into an amendment to the share purchase and warrant agreement with Rakesh Jhunjhunwala for the sale of additional 1,65,000 equity shares for a consideration of Rs 2,47,500."

After completion of this transaction, the Jignesh Shah-led FTIL would completely exit MCX-SX, it added.

For sale of its entire stake in MCX-SX, FTIL on November 25 had entered into a share and warrant purchase agreement with Mr Jhunjhunwala.

Separate warrant purchase agreements were entered with Edelweiss Commodities Services, Trust Investment Advisors, Viral A Parikh, Nemish S Shah, Derive Investments, Kalpraj Dharamshi, Dhanesh Sumatilal Shah, Uday Shah, Madhuri Kela, Renuka Shah, SKS Capital & Research and Madhu Vadera Jayakumar.

FTIL has been in trouble ever since a Rs 5,600-crore payment scam surfaced at group firm National Spot Exchange Ltd (NSEL) in July last year.

The group is exiting from the exchange business and is focusing only on core technology business after commodity markets regulator FMC order in December 2013 declared FTIL and its founder Jignesh Shah as unfit to run any exchanges in view of this scam.

In August, FTIL exited commodity exchange MCX by selling its 26 per cent stake in the bourse, it had originally promoted. Of the total stake in MCX, 15 per cent were sold to Kotak Mahindra Bank for Rs 459 crore.

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