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8h agoBombay High Court Ruling Opens Doors for Investors Wronged by Broker Defaults

A recent Bombay High Court decision has the potential to open the floodgates for numerous claims from investors wronged by broker defaults. The case involved Daksha Narendra Bhavsar, who, after losing her husband, spent years trying to recover her shares from custodians in India’s securities market. Despite following all the proper procedures, Bhavsar and her late husband’s carefully built blue chip portfolio disappeared due to oversight failures, not reckless trading.
Tags:
- Bombay High Court
- Investor Rights
Explore:Mutual Fund Categories
neutral
8h agoBombay High Court Ruling Opens Doors for Investors Wronged by Broker Defaults

A recent Bombay High Court decision has the potential to open the floodgates for numerous claims from investors wronged by broker defaults. The case involved Daksha Narendra Bhavsar, who, after losing her husband, spent years trying to recover her shares from custodians in India’s securities market. Despite following all the proper procedures, Bhavsar and her late husband’s carefully built blue chip portfolio disappeared due to oversight failures, not reckless trading.
Tags:
- Bombay High Court
- Investor Rights
Explore:Mutual Fund Categories
1 min read
70 words

Bombay High Court’s ruling could lead to a surge in claims from investors who suffered losses due to broker defaults and custodial failures.
A recent Bombay High Court decision has the potential to open the floodgates for numerous claims from investors wronged by broker defaults. The case involved Daksha Narendra Bhavsar, who, after losing her husband, spent years trying to recover her shares from custodians in India’s securities market. Despite following all the proper procedures, Bhavsar and her late husband’s carefully built blue chip portfolio disappeared due to oversight failures, not reckless trading.

A recent Bombay High Court decision has the potential to open the floodgates for numerous claims from investors wronged by broker defaults. The case involved Daksha Narendra Bhavsar, who, after losing her husband, spent years trying to recover her shares from custodians in India’s securities market. Despite following all the proper procedures, Bhavsar and her late husband’s carefully built blue chip portfolio disappeared due to oversight failures, not reckless trading.
Tags:
- Bombay High Court
- Investor Rights
- Bombay High Court
- Investor Rights
- CDSL
- NSDL
- Broker Defaults
- Securities Market
Dec 19, 2025 • 06:55