The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan held an edition of its Talk Series with renowned businessman Arif Habib attending as chief guest, providing the occasion for SECP Chairman Dr Kabir Ahmed Sidhu to outline the regulator’s ambitions for expanding Pakistan’s investor base and modernising the country’s capital market infrastructure. At the centre of the chairman’s remarks was a target to grow the number of investors in Pakistan to 2.5 million, a figure that represents a significant expansion from current levels and one that the regulator is working toward through a combination of procedural simplification, digital reform, and a focused effort to bring younger and first-time investors into the capital market.
Dr Sidhu outlined several specific reform streams that the SECP is pursuing to make the 2.5 million investor target achievable. The process of opening investment accounts is being further simplified, addressing one of the most commonly cited barriers that keeps potential investors from entering the formal capital market despite having the interest and the means to do so. The complexity and time required to open a brokerage or investment account in Pakistan has historically created a friction point that discourages casual or first-time investors in ways that more streamlined markets in the region do not, and the SECP’s efforts to reduce that friction are a direct response to feedback from the market about where the entry barriers are most acute.
The implementation of a T+1 settlement system is another reform the chairman highlighted as being in rapid progress. Moving from the current settlement cycle to a one-day settlement standard would bring Pakistan’s capital market closer to the practices of more developed exchanges, reducing counterparty risk, improving liquidity, and making Pakistan’s market more attractive to international institutional investors who operate with the expectation of shorter settlement windows as a baseline rather than an advantage. The combination of T+1 settlement with the digital reforms being introduced across the investment account opening and management process would represent a meaningful step toward the chairman’s stated objective of aligning Pakistan’s capital market with international standards, a goal that is increasingly necessary as Pakistan competes for cross-border capital flows in an environment where investors have more options than ever before.
The attraction of young people and new investors to the capital market was identified by Dr Sidhu as one of SECP’s key priorities, a framing that reflects an understanding that the long-term health of Pakistan’s capital market depends not only on deepening participation among existing investors but on broadening the demographic base of who participates in formal investment. Pakistan’s youth population is one of the largest in the world, and a generation that is comfortable with digital financial tools and increasingly aware of wealth-building as a goal represents a significant potential source of new investor accounts if the barriers to entry are low enough and the investment products on offer are relevant enough to their circumstances and risk tolerance. The SECP Talk Series itself, which brings leading business figures into direct conversation with the broader investment community, is positioned as a vehicle for building exactly that kind of awareness and aspiration among the next generation of Pakistani investors.
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