New Delhi: The National Stock Exchange (NSE) may need to refile its application for a stock listing after looking into whether brokers were provided unfair access to its servers, markets regulator chairman Ajay Tyagi said on Monday. 


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NSE submitted an application for an initial public offering (IPO) in December, but Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has yet to approve the listing amid an ongoing regulatory probe into whether India`s biggest exchange had provided unfair access to its servers to some brokers. 


NSE said at the time it could not conclusively determine whether any collusion had happened between its employees and market participants, spurring the regulator to look for a forensic auditor to further probe into the matter.


SEBI Chairman Tyagi suggested on Monday that it wanted the NSE to address the probe first and then left open the prospect the exchange would need to refile the IPO.


"I think they themselves have to do it," Tyagi told reporters on the sidelines of an event when pressed about whether the NSE would need to update its application with new information, including an update to its financial statements.


The NSE declined to comment.


The NSE has sought to move ahead with its listing, proposing to settle it with the regulator through the payment of a penalty, according to two sources familiar with the matter. SEBI has not said whether it would be open to a settlement.


NSE`s older rival BSE Ltd listed in early February and has seen its share surge 33 percent from its IPO price as the bourse has benefited from a record-setting rally in share markets that are expected to improve profits.