
कमिसन आम्दानी ५१५ रुपैयाँ — केही ब्रोकर कम्पनीको अस्तित्व नै संकटमाMonthly Commission of Rs. 515 — Some Broker Companies Fighting for Survival
नेपालको सेयर बजारमा कारोबार सुस्तिँदै गएको असर अब ब्रोकर कम्पनीहरूको अस्तित्वमाथि नै प्रश्न खडा गर्ने ठाउँमा पुगेको छ। जेठ महिनामा ९१ वटा ब्रोकर कम्पनीले सेयर खरिदबिक्रीबाट जम्मा ३६ करोड ६२ लाख रुपैयाँ कमिसन कमाए — तर यो रकम सबैमा बराबर भागेको छैन। तीन वटा कम्पनीको महिनाभरको कमिसन आम्दानी ५० हजार रुपैयाँभन्दा पनि कम रह्यो।
तथ्यांक हेर्दा वास्तविकता झनै कठोर देखिन्छ। पाही इन्भेष्टमेन्टले जेठ महिनामा ४९ हजार १२२ रुपैयाँ, बेनी सेक्युरिटीजले ३९ हजार ३०७ रुपैयाँ र मनी वोल्ड सेयर एक्सचेन्जले जम्मा ५१५ रुपैयाँ कमिसन आर्जन गर्यो। एउटा साधारण कर्मचारीको एक दिनको तलब पनि नपुग्ने रकम कमाएर महिनाभर संस्था सञ्चालन गर्नुपर्ने अवस्था यी कम्पनीको छ।
यो घाटाको कथा नयाँ होइन। गत आर्थिक वर्षमा पनि यी तीनै कम्पनीले ठूलो नोक्सान बेहोरेका थिए। पाही इन्भेष्टमेन्टले ६५ लाख १४ हजार, बेनी सेक्युरिटीजले ८० लाख ५० हजार र मनी वोल्ड सेयर एक्सचेन्जले १ करोड १ हजार रुपैयाँ खुद घाटा व्यहोरेको थियो। उल्लेखनीय कुरा के छ भने, गत वर्ष बजारमा कारोबार रकम यो वर्षभन्दा बढी थियो — तर पनि ५ वटा कम्पनी घाटामा थिए। अहिले कारोबार झनै घटेको छ।
स्टक ब्रोकर्स एसोसिएसन अफ नेपालका महासचिव भक्तिराम घिमिरेले यो समस्याको जरो कारोबार रकमको तीव्र गिरावटमा रहेको बताउँछन्। गत वर्ष दैनिक औसत १५ देखि १६ अर्ब रुपैयाँ हुने कारोबार अहिले खुम्चिएर २ देखि ३ अर्ब रुपैयाँमा सीमित भएको छ। यो झन्डै ८० प्रतिशतको गिरावट हो। यति ठूलो संकुचन हुँदा ब्रोकर कम्पनीहरूको आम्दानी पनि त्यही अनुपातमा घटेको छ।
घिमिरेले भने, 'एउटा ब्रोकर कम्पनी सञ्चालन गर्न मात्र मासिक करिब १५ लाख रुपैयाँ खर्च लाग्छ। कर्मचारी तलब, कार्यालय भाडा, टीएमएस चार्ज र अन्य विविध खर्च जोड्दा यति त लाग्छ नै। तर आम्दानी त्योभन्दा कैयौं गुणा कम छ। यस्तो अवस्थामा संस्थाहरू कसरी टिक्ने?' उनका अनुसार नयाँ ब्रोकर कम्पनीहरू आउँदा नयाँ सेवा र आम्दानीका थप स्रोत सिर्जना हुने अपेक्षा गरिएको थियो, तर व्यवसाय अझै पनि केवल खरिदबिक्रीमै सीमित छ।
मार्जिन ट्रेडिङको विषयमा उनको भनाइ स्पष्ट छ। धेरै चर्चा भए पनि वास्तविक कार्यान्वयन अझै सुरु हुन सकेको छैन। अक्सन मार्केट पनि छैन। यस्तो परिस्थितिमा ब्रोकर कम्पनीहरूले आफ्नो सम्पत्ति बैंकमा धितो राखेर ऋण लिएर मार्जिन ट्रेडिङ गराउनुपर्ने विकट अवस्था आएको छ।
लगानीकर्ताको अवस्था पनि फरक छैन। नयाँ सरकार गठन भएयता बजार पुँजीकरण ४ खर्ब रुपैयाँभन्दा बढीले घटिसकेको छ। लगानीकर्ताहरू मनोबल गुमाएर पर्ख र हेरको अवस्थामा छन्। बजार घट्दो छ, कारोबार घट्दो छ — यस्तो वातावरणमा ब्रोकर कम्पनीहरू प्रभावित हुनु अस्वाभाविक होइन।
यस्तो संकटपूर्ण अवस्थामा स्टक ब्रोकर्स एसोसिएसन अफ नेपालले आगामी आर्थिक वर्षको मौद्रिक नीतिका लागि नेपाल राष्ट्र बैंकसमक्ष केही महत्वपूर्ण सुझाव पेश गरेको छ। बैंक तथा वित्तीय संस्थाहरूलाई दोस्रो बजारमा सहज प्रवेश र बहिर्गमनको सुविधा दिनुपर्ने, मार्जिन ट्रेडिङ कर्जालाई छुट्टै वित्तीय उत्पादनका रूपमा विकास गर्नुपर्ने र एनआरएन तथा विदेशी संस्थागत लगानीकर्तालाई दोस्रो बजारमा सहज लगानी गर्न दिनुपर्ने एसोसिएसनको माग छ।
एसोसिएसनले सरकारी बचत तथा ऋणपत्रलाई नेप्सेमा सूचीकृत गरी दोस्रो बजारमा कारोबार गर्न सकिने व्यवस्था मिलाउन पनि आग्रह गरेको छ। यसका साथै अनुसन्धानका क्रममा ब्रोकर कम्पनीका सेटलमेन्ट खाता रोक्का गर्दा नियमित कारोबार अवरुद्ध हुने भन्दै यस्तो खातामा रोक नलगाउन नियमावली संशोधन गर्न माग गरिएको छ।
बजार जानकारहरूका अनुसार ब्रोकर व्यवसाय बचाउन केवल नीतिगत सुधार मात्र पर्याप्त छैन। कारोबार रकम बढाउन लगानीकर्ताको विश्वास फर्काउनु जरुरी छ र त्यसका लागि सेबोनमा स्थायी नेतृत्व, स्पष्ट नीतिगत दिशा र बजारमा नयाँ उत्पादन र सेवाको विविधीकरण अपरिहार्य छ।
Nepal's stock market slowdown has reached a point where the very existence of several broker companies is now under serious threat. In the month of Jestha, 91 broker companies collectively earned Rs. 36.62 million in commission from share trading — but that income was far from evenly distributed. Three companies failed to earn even Rs. 50,000 in commission for the entire month, raising urgent questions about how they can continue to operate.
The numbers tell a stark story. Pahi Investment earned just Rs. 49,122, Beni Securities Rs. 39,307, and Money World Share Exchange a barely believable Rs. 515 in commission throughout the entire month of Jestha. To put that in perspective, Rs. 515 would not cover a single day's wages for even the most junior employee. Yet these companies are expected to pay staff salaries, office rent, TMS charges, and a range of other operational expenses every single month.
This is not a new crisis — it has been building for some time. In the previous fiscal year, all three companies recorded significant net losses. Pahi Investment lost Rs. 6.514 million, Beni Securities Rs. 8.050 million, and Money World Share Exchange Rs. 10.001 million. What makes this particularly alarming is that last year's trading volumes were actually higher than they are now. Even with comparatively better market activity, five broker companies were already running at a loss. The situation this year is considerably worse.
Secretary General of the Stock Brokers' Association of Nepal, Bhaktiram Ghimire, points to the dramatic collapse in daily trading volume as the root cause. Daily average turnover that once stood between Rs. 15 billion and Rs. 16 billion last year has now shrunk to just Rs. 2 billion to Rs. 3 billion — a decline of nearly 80 percent. When turnover falls by that magnitude, commission income falls with it, and no amount of cost-cutting can bridge that gap.
Ghimire was direct about the financial reality facing broker companies. "Running a broker company costs approximately Rs. 1.5 million per month just to keep the lights on," he said. "Staff salaries, office rent, TMS charges, and miscellaneous expenses all add up. But income is a fraction of that. How are these institutions supposed to survive?" He added that when new broker companies entered the market, there was genuine hope that new services and additional revenue streams would emerge. That hope has not materialized. The business remains almost entirely dependent on buy-sell commissions with no meaningful diversification.
On the subject of margin trading, Ghimire was equally candid. Despite considerable discussion and regulatory approval, real implementation has barely begun. The auction market has not taken shape either. In the absence of these alternative products, some broker companies have resorted to pledging their own assets with banks to borrow money and offer margin trading facilities — a deeply unsustainable model that puts the companies themselves at financial risk.
The broader investor landscape offers little comfort. Since the formation of the new government, total market capitalization has shrunk by more than Rs. 400 billion. Investors have lost confidence and adopted a wait-and-watch approach, keeping their money on the sidelines. With buyers reluctant to enter and turnover continuing to fall, broker companies are caught in a downward spiral they cannot escape on their own.
Against this difficult backdrop, the Stock Brokers' Association of Nepal has submitted a series of recommendations to Nepal Rastra Bank ahead of the upcoming monetary policy. The association has called for banks and financial institutions to be allowed easier entry and exit in the secondary market, removing the current requirement to hold securities for at least six months before selling. It has also proposed that margin trading loans be developed as a separate financial product and classified as commercial lending, with share collateral and margin-type loans excluded from the 40 percent core capital limit and calculated instead on the basis of total loan investment.
The association has further urged that Non-Resident Nepalis and foreign institutional investors be given a smoother pathway to invest in the secondary market and repatriate profits. It has also recommended that government savings bonds and treasury bills be listed on NEPSE to enable secondary market trading — a move that would significantly broaden the investment universe and attract a wider pool of participants.
On a more immediate operational concern, the association has requested an amendment to the bank account freeze regulations. When broker company settlement accounts are frozen during investigations, normal trading operations are disrupted for clients who have no connection to the matter under investigation. The association argues that settlement accounts, which handle client funds rather than company funds, should be treated differently and protected from blanket freezing orders.
Industry observers note that policy changes alone will not be enough to rescue broker companies from their current predicament. Restoring investor confidence, filling the leadership vacuum at SEBON, providing clear and consistent policy direction, and diversifying the product range available in Nepal's capital market are all seen as essential prerequisites for any meaningful and lasting recovery.



