For long-term investors in the Metropolitan Stock Exchange of India Limited (MSEI), one question has remained unanswered for years:

“When will the exchange actually revive?”

On 8 January 2026, MSEI released a circular attempting to answer this question—not through promises, but through a market structure.

It’s called the Liquidity Enhancement Scheme (LES).

Let’s break down why this circular matters, what has changed on the ground, and whether this can genuinely restart the exchange or is just another experiment.

A) The Core Problem MSEI Has Always Faced

Exchanges don’t fail due to a lack of listings—they fail because nobody trades.

MSEI’s biggest challenges have been:

This created a vicious cycle:

LES is designed to break this cycle from the liquidity side, not through marketing or branding.

B) What Exactly Is the Liquidity Enhancement Scheme?

Under LES, MSEI will pay professional market makers to continuously provide buy and sell quotes—ensuring visible liquidity for investors.

This is standard practice in serious exchanges globally. But for MSEI, it’s the first large-scale, incentive-driven attempt to institutionalize liquidity.

C) The Most Important Shift: Mandatory Two-Way Markets

Under LES, the rules are clear:

Designated Market Makers must provide both buy and sell quotes.

Quotes must be present for 85–90% of market hours.

Single-side quotes are not acceptable.

Why this matters:

D) Depth Matters More Than Just Quotes

MSEI hasn’t stopped at “best bid–best ask.”

Market makers must quote across five levels of the order book, with increasing value commitments:

Order Book Level Minimum Quote Value
Top Level ₹50,000
Second Level ₹75,000
Third Level ₹1,00,000
Fourth Level ₹1,25,000
Fifth Level ₹1,50,000

This is crucial because:

This is how exchanges protect investors during sudden buying or selling pressure.

E) Tight Bid–Ask Spreads = Lower Hidden Costs

LES also caps the maximum bid–ask spread:

Why this matters:

Liquidity is not just about volume—it’s also about fair pricing.

F) The Incentive That Changes Everything

₹40 lacs per month per market maker.

This is not symbolic. It’s serious money.

Additional benefits:

This incentive:

G) Why the Stock List Is Strategically Important

The scheme includes 130 high-quality, widely followed stocks, including:

Why this matters:

H) What This Means for Investors in MSEI

This circular matters for MSEI shareholders because it reflects structural intent—not cosmetic intent.

Instead of:

MSEI is investing in:

These are the foundations of a functioning exchange.

I) But Will This Alone Restart the Exchange?

Short answer: Not immediately—but it’s a necessary first step.

LES can:

But for a full revival, MSEI will still need:

Liquidity can be bought initially. Trust has to be earned gradually.

J) The Big Takeaway for Long-Term Investors

This scheme does not guarantee success.

But it does confirm something important:

MSEI is no longer ignoring its core weakness.

For investors who have stayed invested hoping for a restart, LES is the strongest operational signal so far that the exchange wants to compete on market quality—not narratives.

The real test will be:

If that happens, this circular may be remembered as the point where MSEI stopped talking about revival—and started engineering it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *