Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Vikram, a salaried investor in Chennai, bought 150 shares of a company in cash and saw the debit in his bank. A week later his Consolidated Account Statement showed only 150 of an unrelated holding pledged, and the 150 he bought sat in a “pledge” column he never authorised. He had received no OTP from the depository for any pledge. What had happened was that his broker had taken his shares into a margin pledge against the broker's own funding requirement, without his consent. Vikram emailed the broker's compliance officer the same day, asked for an account freeze, attached the CAS, and when the broker stalled, escalated to the depository and then SEBI SCORES. The pledge was reversed and the shares returned to his free balance.
His case shows the order that works: trace it on the CAS, freeze the account, complain in writing to the DP, then escalate. The remedy differs slightly depending on whether your shares were wrongly pledged or actually transferred out, so first be clear which one you face.
The Consolidated Account Statement is the depository's own record, so it overrides whatever the broker's app shows. Download it and read three columns for each security:
Get the CAS from the CDSL or NSDL portal using your PAN and date of birth. For real-time viewing, CDSL holders can use CDSL easi and NSDL holders can use NSDL IDeAS, both free. Any difference between the CAS and your broker's ledger is what you flag in writing.
Shares bought on the exchange credit to your demat under the T+1 settlement cycle, so a purchase on Monday should reflect by Tuesday end. If they have not credited after T+1, check your broker ledger for a pending payment, a margin shortfall, or a failed-settlement flag, because an unpaid balance can hold the credit. If you have paid in full and the shares still do not appear, that is a discrepancy to raise.
To: The Compliance Officer, [Broker / DP] Subject: Unauthorised pledge / missing shares - BO ID [number] I hold demat account BO ID [number] with you as Depository Participant. [For missing shares] On [date] I bought [quantity] shares of [Company] (ISIN [code]). Under T+1 they should have credited by [date]. My CAS dated [date] does not show them in my free balance. [For wrongful pledge] My CAS dated [date] shows [quantity] shares of [Company] (ISIN [code]) in Pledge Balance. I gave no pledge instruction and received no OTP from the depository authorising it. Enclosed: CAS extract, demat transaction statement [date range], broker ledger [date range], trade confirmation. I request you to: 1) explain the discrepancy in writing within [X] business days; 2) release the unauthorised pledge / credit the missing shares to my free balance; 3) place no further pledge or transfer without my OTP confirmation to the depository. Failing a satisfactory reply I will escalate to [CDSL / NSDL] and SEBI SCORES. [Name, PAN, BO ID, mobile, date]
Since 2022 the Demat Debit and Pledge Instruction (DDPI) replaced the broad Power of Attorney brokers used to take. Under DDPI a broker can debit or pledge your shares only for exchange settlement and margin on your own trades, not move them to its own pool. Every pledge also needs an OTP sent directly to you by the depository. If you signed an old POA before that change, it may still grant wide powers, so ask your DP to replace it with a DDPI. Never share a pledge OTP with anyone, including someone claiming to be your broker.
SEBI is a public authority under the RTI Act. An RTI to SEBI can seek a broker's registration status, or whether SEBI has issued a show-cause or taken enforcement action against your broker or DP, subject to exemptions. Your broker, and the depositories CDSL and NSDL, are private-sector bodies and are not under RTI; the Central Information Commission has doubted treating the depositories as public authorities. Stock exchanges and the listed companies whose shares you hold are also outside RTI. For all of those, SCORES and the depository grievance cells are the right forums. File an RTI to SEBI at rtionline.gov.in and read why RTI gets rejected first.
Check your CAS and your broker ledger. A pending payment or margin shortfall can hold the credit. If you have paid in full and the CAS still does not show the shares after T+1, raise a written complaint with the DP and escalate to the depository or SCORES.
A genuine margin pledge needs an OTP sent to you directly by CDSL or NSDL. If your CAS shows a Pledge Balance and you never received or confirmed such an OTP, treat it as unauthorised and complain at once.
A pledge keeps shares in your account, locked; you stay the owner. A transfer moves them out entirely. Report a suspected transfer to the depository immediately for an account freeze, and route a wrongful pledge through the DP then the depository.
Yes. SCORES accepts complaints against SEBI-registered brokers and DPs. You must first raise it with the intermediary and allow time to reply. Register with your PAN, mobile and email.
No. The depository sends a pledge OTP only to you. Never share it with your broker or anyone. A caller asking for it is a red flag; refuse and report it.
No. They are not public authorities. RTI works only against SEBI, and only for SEBI's own records. Use the depository grievance portals and SCORES for your broker and DP.
Download the missing or wrongly pledged shares checklist (PDF).