The Over the Counter Exchange of India (OTCEI) was set up by public financial institutions in 1990, and started operations in 1992. It was India's first stock exchange with fully computer-based electronic trading – beating even the NSE, which began in 1994.
OTCEI was inspired by America's NASDAQ. Its main goal was to help small, tech-focused entrepreneurs – especially those building new products – raise money easily and cheaply.
Back then, listing on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) needed at least ₹10 crore in paid-up capital (other regional exchanges asked for ₹3 crore). OTCEI? Just ₹30 lakh. That low bar was meant to open doors for tiny, promising companies.
The listing process was different and more transparent:
· A company placed its shares with a "sponsor member" (like a guide or underwriter).
· At least two market makers were appointed to always be ready to buy or sell shares.
· The sponsor sold shares to investors through dealers.
· After that, investors could trade freely.
It looked modern, fair, and low-cost – the same system that worked well in the US.
At its peak, OTCEI had 30 sponsor members, 118 active brokers, and over 1,000 dealers nationwide. Around 115 companies – mostly small ones started by first-time entrepreneurs – raised money on OTCEI.
Yet this pioneering, fully automated exchange turned out to be a big failure. It collapsed in under five years, though it wasn't officially shut down until SEBI de-recognized it in 2015, and the company went into liquidation in 2017.Almost every company listed on OTCEI ran into serious trouble; most eventually shut down or got liquidated.
Why did it fail so badly? The biggest reason was inexperience everywhere:
· The exchange managers had never run a stock exchange before.
· Brokers and members weren't used to transparent, regulated, tech-driven trading – and they didn't have good research skills.
· The promoters listing their companies were mostly first-generation entrepreneurs with limited money, poor financial know-how, and untested products or technology.
· Investors were newcomers too; they didn't really understand these new-age businesses or the huge risks.
Everyone treated OTCEI like a casino – chasing quick jackpots. In the end, nobody won. Investors lost money, companies struggled, brokers earned little, and even the exchange itself made almost nothing.
The same story has come back, this time through the BSE SME platform (launched 2012) and NSE Emerge (also 2012). Since then, over 1,400 small and medium companies have done IPOs on these platforms.
Some have done well – more than 500 grew big enough to "graduate" to the main BSE or NSE boards. But a large chunk – around 60% in many recent analyses (with figures like 57-65% in 2024-2025 data) – are now trading below their IPO price. That means heavy losses (often 25-80%) for investors who bought at the offer.
Clearly, regulators, exchanges, brokers, and investment bankers haven't fully learned from the OTCEI disaster. Valuations get pushed too high, issues get oversold to clients, warnings about SME risks stay too mild, and investors keep hunting for that one big winner.
The lesson hits hard: The more things change, the more they stay the same. This time around, it's really no different.