The process through which physical securities like share certificates and related documents are converted into electronic form is known as dematerialisation.(Photo by Romain Dancre on Unsplash ) The ...
Why is there so much excitement among insurance companies these days? Well, it is because the insurance regulator IRDAI is now giving a big push to “dematerialisation” of policies. As part of this ...
In the mid-1990s, when the shares of listed companies first began to be held in electronic form, they accounted for less than 1 per cent of the stocks bought and sold on the stock exchanges. This ...
Converting physical shares into demat form: In the past, trading in the Indian share market relied on the open outcry system, requiring investors to be physically present at stock exchanges to buy and ...
Reading on Finextra last week about dematerialisation in the Netherlands reminded me about the issues that you face when you want to move from paper documents to electronic documents – particularly ...
The Centre has given private companies —other than Producer companies—more time to comply with an earlier diktat to dematerialise their shares. As against the earlier specified deadline of September ...
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Tamilnad Mercantile Bank Files SEBI Dematerialisation Compliance Certificate for Q3 FY2025-26
Tamilnad Mercantile Bank Limited ( (IN:TMB)) has provided an announcement. Tamilnad Mercantile Bank Limited has notified the stock exchanges that it has received and submitted the requisite ...
Dematerialisation – the process of substituting physical products with services and digital products within the ICT sector and other sectors – will not only generate green and sustainability benefits, ...
There was a time when the Indian stock market followed the open outcry system, and the default trading method was through physical certificates. Conventionally, this resulted in a large amount of ...
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