Angel One Limited, a prominent Indian retail stockbroking house, has formally settled a regulatory case with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) by paying a settlement fee of ₹4.28 crore (specifically ₹4,28,01,600).
The order effectively brings to a close the separate show-cause notices issued by the capital markets regulator in May 2025, which spanned both adjudication and enquiry proceedings. In alignment with standard consent mechanisms under SEBI (Settlement Proceedings) Regulations, 2018, the settlement was executed “without admission of liability or guilt” by Angel One.
Core Allegations: Lapses in Sub-Broker Supervision
The enforcement action stemmed from investigations into serious compliance and supervisory failures tied to two of the brokerage’s Authorised Persons (APs)—Deepankar Barman and Nadella Srinivas Rao—who act as localized client acquisition and service intermediaries.
SEBI’s probe highlighted a wide range of operational red flags that slipped through Angel One’s internal compliance firewalls:
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Unauthorised Fund Collection: The broker failed to detect that its representatives were directly collecting funds from retail clients outside regular trading mechanisms.
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Deceptive Social Media Marketing: At least one of the APs aggressively utilized Angel One’s brand name and logo on social media platforms to promise assured returns and conduct unauthorized portfolio management services.
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Disproportionate Trading Activity: The brokerage failed to flag or investigate massive, anomalous trading volumes and patterns generated by these individuals relative to their declared profiles.
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Dual Broker Trading: Both authorized individuals were actively trading through other stockbrokers simultaneously, which Angel One failed to intercept.
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Shared Technical Footprints: SEBI identified that trade orders for entirely distinct clients were being placed through identical IP and MAC addresses under Nadella Srinivas Rao’s domain without proper inspection or audits by the principal broker.
Breakdown of the Settlement Timeline
The administrative resolution progressed through a structured evaluation process spanning over a year before its final disclosure:
Operational and Corporate Impact
In its regulatory disclosure filed under Regulation 30 of the SEBI (LODR) Regulations, Angel One clarified that no further statutory penalties have been levied outside of the agreed-upon consent fee.
The brokerage emphasized that the settlement wraps up the legal overhang and carries no material impact on its daily operational capabilities or client-facing trading architectures. However, the case serves as a stark reminder of the escalating compliance pressures confronting rapidly scaling discount and retail brokerages in India, where regulators are demanding strict, real-time oversight of distributed franchise networks.
