Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From May 23, 2018

Breathe Easy, NSE. Your Index Isn’t Exactly Star Wars

Breathe Easy, NSE. Your Index Isn’t Exactly Star Wars
Global money managers could find their access curtailed. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Is the Nifty 50 a work of art – like Star Wars?

Over the coming weeks, the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. will assert an intellectual property right over its popular equity benchmark. It's seeking an injunction against Singapore Exchange Ltd., which wants to start its own derivative based on publicly available settlement prices of Nifty futures contracts.

Such lawsuits are nothing new in the world of index providers and exchanges.

In 2006, the New York Mercantile Exchange failed to persuade both a U.S. District Court1 and the Second Circuit Court that Intercontinental Exchange Inc. was violating the copyright of Nymex settlement prices by using them in its over-the-counter derivative contracts. The judges ruled that settlement price wasn't one expression of an idea where others were possible. Rather, it was the only way to express Nymex crude's closing price. Giving Nymex a copyright would amount to giving it intellectual ownership of… prices. And that would be ridiculous.

The whole “misappropriation” argument – another shouldn't harvest what one has sown – was the legal norm 100 years ago. However, today's judges realize that too much rights protection for things that are facts – and not creative intellectual property like Darth Vader's helmet or even his peculiar breathing – could kill finance.

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search