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DGS Capital Management Pvt : THE ₹200-CRORE MIRAGE: Exposed a Portfolio Manager’s Compliance Collapse

For two years, a Mumbai-based portfolio manager DGS Capital Management Pvt. Ltd was doubling its assets under management, onboarding affluent investors, and projecting the image of a fast-rising wealth manager in India’s booming markets.Behind the glossy pitch decks and confident quarterly calls, however, SEBI discovered an uncomfortable truth:

DGS Capital Management Pvt. Ltd. was operating at barely 30% of the net worth required to legally manage public money.

DGS Capital Management regulatory filings were missing.

Its Principal Officer lacked the mandatory certification. And its booming business concealed a hollow compliance core.  When SEBI finally intervened, the façade cracked open. This is the inside story — a case study of growth without guardrails.

DGS Capital wasn’t a fringe player.

It was a registered Portfolio Manager managing close to ₹200 crore — big enough to matter, small enough to avoid mainstream scrutiny.

But growth makes noise.

Which is why SEBI’s examination team began noticing silences:

No net worth certificate for two years.

No compliance report.

No corporate governance report.

The real shock came when SEBI analyzed the company’s financials.

Under SEBI’s 2020 regulations, every portfolio manager registered prior to the new law had to raise net worth to ₹5 crore by January 15, 2023.

FY 2022–23: ₹1.63 crore

FY 2023–24: ₹1.59 crore

The firm was operating below regulatory minimums for over 24 months, unchecked.

Yet during this very period, its AUM (Assets Under Management)  surged from ₹99 crore to ₹201 crore — a dramatic 103% jump.

It was the classic red flag: Ascending business, descending compliance.

A perfect recipe for regulatory intervention.

SEBI’s findings didn’t stop at financial weakness.

The investigation revealed that the company’s Principal Officer — the individual responsible for key investment decisions — had failed to obtain the mandatory NISM XXI-B certification by the regulatory deadline.

He remained uncertified from September 2023 to October 2024, effectively making the firm’s fund management operations non-compliant for more than a year.

THE INTERIM ORDER THAT SHOOK THE FIRM

On February 17, 2025, SEBI issued an “Interim Order-cum-Show Cause Notice” — the regulatory equivalent of a red alert.

Only then did DGS Capital Spring into action: It infused funds to push net worth above ₹5 crore, barely crossing the threshold. It submitted all pending reports within 48 hours. It highlighted that the certification issue had been “resolved months earlier.” The timing spoke louder than the filings. The sudden burst of compliance merely confirmed the earlier lack of it.

Given the severity of the lapses, SEBI could have recommended:

Suspension of registration

Transfer of clients to another manager

Market access restrictions

Instead, the regulator chose a calibrated approach:

₹1 lakh penalty for failure to submit mandatory reports

₹2 lakh penalty for general non-compliance

Total: ₹3 lakh

Because:  DGS Capital ultimately complied with all the interim directions,

It had no previous SEBI violations, and

The regulator acknowledged its corrective action.

Still, the message was unmistakable.

Growth is not a defence. Compliance is not optional.

This case raises a deeper, systemic issue:

How many fast-growing wealth managers are operating below regulatory radar, missing certifications, or delaying critical filings — even as they attract crores from unsuspecting investors?

DGS Capital may have escaped with a monetary penalty, but the investigation reveals a worrying trend in India’s expanding portfolio management industry:

A compliance culture that reacts only when the regulator knocks.

In the world of financial markets, that delay can cost investors far more than ₹3 lakh.

DGS Capital: failed to maintain mandatory ₹5 crore net worth for 2 years,

Operated at just ₹1.6 crore while managing ₹200+ crore AUM,

 Skipped critical filings for two consecutive years,

  Had an uncertified Principal Officer for over a year.

The firm’s AUM had doubled — yet only a symbolic fine

 During the period of non-compliance: AUM (Assets Under Management) jumped from ₹99 crore to ₹201 crore (a 103% surge).

Despite handling large public funds while violating rules, the penalty is small compared to the financial scale of the operations.

Suspended the registration,

Frozen onboarding  

Mandated client transfer,

Imposed higher financial penalties,

Initiated stricter enforcement proceedings.

The company complied only after being caught

DGS Capital: infused capital only after the show-cause notice,

1. filed filings only after the interim order,  2. fixed certification gaps only after SEBI flagged it.

So, “Why SEBI  reward reactive compliance with only a token penalty?”

Yet the outcome was: no ban, no suspension, No operational restrictions,

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