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Corporate filings alerts: India dashboards investors track

Reddit and social media discussions are increasingly focused on dashboards that track corporate filings and exchange announcements in one place. The appeal is simple: investors want fewer clicks between a headline and the actual filing. Posts point to pages that list disclosures with fields like symbol, company name, regulation reference, type of submission, broadcast date and an XBRL file link. One screenshot shared shows the table marked as “now unsorted,” which is a practical pain point for anyone scanning updates quickly. Even so, the same view helps users spot what landed on the exchange feed and when. The most repeated ask in these threads is an alert-like workflow where a user can monitor disclosures across many symbols without manually searching each company. Users also highlight that filings are not only about quarterly results, but about governance, transactions, and compliance updates that can move sentiment. The trend reflects how retail investors are trying to match institutional workflows using publicly available disclosure feeds.

What the dashboard format typically shows

The filings view circulating online is built like an exchange bulletin board with standardized columns. In the insider-trading disclosures section, users specifically mention SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 2015, citing Regulation 7(2) read with Regulation 6(2). The table includes “Details” links with document sizes and a separate XBRL download link, which is called out with a note explaining “To know more about 'XBRL FILE LINK' click here.” This matters because some users prefer structured files for tracking rather than reading long PDFs. The broadcast date and time column is also central because it lets watchers reconcile a disclosure’s timing with price action and news flow. Another note referenced in the shared context says financial results for quarter ended March 2025 and thereafter will be available under “Integrated Filing - Financials.” That kind of pointer is useful for people who missed where exchanges have moved certain filings. The main limitation flagged in the discussion is usability, such as unsorted tables, which can slow scanning. Even with those rough edges, the layout is designed for fast triage.

Insider trading disclosures: recent examples investors flagged

A key subset of alerts discussed is insider-trading related filings under Regulation 7(2). The shared examples include MINDSPACE BUSINESS PARKS REIT and EMBASSY OFFICE PARKS REIT, both shown under Regulation 7(2) as “Original” submissions. The posts include document sizes for both the “Details” file and the XBRL file, suggesting users are comparing the two formats. For MINDSPACE, the broadcast date and time shown is 13-May-2026 18:37:32, with a Details file size of 96.24 KB and an XBRL file size of 37.82 KB. For EMBASSY, the broadcast date and time shown is 06-May-2026 12:03:30, with a Details file size of 21.86 KB and an XBRL file size of 5.17 KB. The discussion around these entries is less about the entities themselves and more about building a habit of checking what hits the tape daily. Users note that REITs and other frequently traded names can generate regular compliance filings that may get missed without a tracker. The shared table format helps people catch these items systematically. It also reinforces that structured disclosure monitoring is not only for company management changes or earnings.

Regulation 30 disclosures: the long tail of “important announcements”

Another heavily discussed bucket is Regulation 30 disclosures, which are often where investors expect to find material updates. The context shared includes a series of Regulation 30 items associated with NSE, spanning governance changes and process updates. Examples listed include incorporation of a not-for-profit Section 8 entity named “Social Stock Exchange Capacity Building Foundation” dated 15-Apr-2026, and an item on SEBI acceptance for final surrender of a Certificate of Registration as a KYC Registration Agency for NSE Data & Analytics Limited dated 14-Apr-2026. There are also entries about amendments in the Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association dated 10-Apr-2026, and a press release titled “NSE concludes the process for selection of intermediaries for proposed IPO” dated 12-Mar-2026. Another item states SEBI has noted and taken on record amendment to MOA and AOA dated 21-Feb-2026. The context further lists a No Objection Certificate received from SEBI for listing of NSE shares on a recognized stock exchange dated 30-Jan-2026. It also references an update on sale of the KRA business from NSE Data & Analytics Limited to CAMS Investor Services Private Limited by way of a Business Transfer Agreement dated 06-Jan-26. For investors, the takeaway in these threads is that many “material” disclosures arrive as incremental updates, which is exactly what dashboards are meant to surface.

Quick scan table: what appeared in the shared feed

The social posts include multiple disclosure types, which is why users value a single dashboard view. The table below consolidates the examples explicitly shown in the shared context, focusing on what a watcher would see at a glance. It is not an exhaustive list of filings, only the items that appeared in the discussion snippets. Users often copy these rows into personal trackers to create a running log of timestamps and document links. The doc sizes are included where the context provided them, because size differences can signal whether a link is a short intimation or a longer attachment. The mix also shows that “alerts” are not limited to companies, and can include ETFs and call transcript uploads. Many investors use these dashboards for end-of-day downloads and quick market snapshots, as the context explicitly mentions. This helps standardize how they capture disclosures across categories.

Item shown in shared feedRegulation or TypeDate / time shownFile size shown
MINDSPACE BUSINESS PARKS REIT (MINDSPACE) filingSEBI PIT Regulation 7(2)13-May-2026 18:37:32Details 96.24 KB, XBRL 37.82 KB
EMBASSY OFFICE PARKS REIT (EMBASSY) filingSEBI PIT Regulation 7(2)06-May-2026 12:03:30Details 21.86 KB, XBRL 5.17 KB
NSE: Section 8 entity “Social Stock Exchange Capacity Building Foundation”Regulation 3015-Apr-2026171 KB
NSE: SEBI acceptance for surrender of KRA registration (NSE Data & Analytics)Regulation 3014-Apr-2026212 KB
MOL (Meghmani Organics Limited)Other business matters04-Apr-2026Not shown
PAKKA LIMITED (PAKKA)Fund Raising04-Apr-2026Not shown
Ola Electric Mobility: Transcript uploadedCall Updates25-May-2026 23:46:351.98 MB
DSP NIFTY 1D Rate Liquid ETF (LIQUIDETF)Declaration of NAVTime shown in feedNot fully shown
Madhusudan Masala LimitedReg. 32 statement of deviation(s)25-May-2026 23:37:181.73 MB

Beyond results: board meetings, transcripts, NAV, and deviations

The discussion highlights that “corporate filings” in India is a broad category that goes beyond financial results. Board meeting intimation type entries appear in the shared feed, such as Meghmani Organics Limited being listed under “Other business matters” with “To consider scheme of amalgamation” dated 04-Apr-2026. Another entry shows PAKKA LIMITED under “Fund Raising” with “To consider Fund Raising,” also dated 04-Apr-2026. These lines are short, but they are exactly the type of early signal many retail investors want to capture before detailed follow-up documents arrive. The feed also includes “Call Updates,” where Ola Electric Mobility Limited informed the exchange about a transcript, with a file size of 1.98 MB and a timestamp of 25-May-2026 23:46:35. Additionally, the context shows ETF-related updates like LIQUIDETF being tied to “Declaration of NAV.” Another example is Madhusudan Masala Limited posting a “statement of deviation(s) or variation(s) under Reg. 32,” with a file size of 1.73 MB and a timestamp of 25-May-2026 23:37:18. Users point out that tracking such items requires a dashboard because these disclosures may not be widely covered in mainstream news.

One specific operational detail repeated in the shared context is the presence of XBRL file links alongside standard “Details” downloads. For users building spreadsheets or automated logs, XBRL is attractive because it can be parsed and compared more easily than narrative PDFs. The note “To know more about 'XBRL FILE LINK' click here” suggests dashboards are designed to educate users who are not familiar with the format. Another practical note states that financial results submitted for quarter ended March 2025 and thereafter will be available under “Integrated Filing - Financials.” This matters for anyone who is used to older menu paths and suddenly cannot find a results PDF in the usual place. In social discussions, this is framed as a usability issue rather than a compliance issue, but it has real consequences for investor monitoring. When exchanges consolidate filings, dashboards that track the new structure become more valuable. Users also interpret “integrated” as a signal that multiple related documents may be bundled, which changes how they store and read disclosures. The combined effect is that investors are paying attention to filing formats, not just filing headlines. Dashboards that clearly label the file type and location reduce the friction.

Rising expectations: what the India Disclosure Index 2025 adds

Alongside these day-to-day alerts, the context also references broader expectations on corporate disclosure in India. The India Disclosure Index 2025 is described as being in its sixth edition and benchmarking voluntary, non-financial disclosures to help companies assess transparency, governance maturity, and preparedness for emerging risks. The context says reporting expectations are evolving rapidly due to global compliance trends, investor scrutiny, technological disruption, and climate-transition demands. It states that the Index examines public disclosures by the top 100 listed companies across two overarching categories: Leadership and Governance Quality, and Risk Disclosure Quality. The analysis is said to evaluate information available through annual reports, BRSR filings, and company websites. It also lists 24 sub-parameters, including geopolitical and supply-chain resilience, AI and automation strategy, workforce and board diversity, cyber governance and incident transparency, climate-transition planning and emissions reporting, and vendor due-diligence and extended supply-chain oversight. For investors, this matters because filing dashboards capture the mandatory flow, while the Index focuses on how companies communicate beyond bare minimum requirements. The combination reflects a market where both compliance filings and narrative transparency are being scrutinized. Social media chatter suggests that investors are trying to connect these themes by using filings as raw inputs for judging governance quality.

How investors are using dashboards without over-reading them

The shared posts repeatedly position dashboards as a monitoring tool rather than a predictive signal. Investors use them to confirm that a disclosure exists, record the timestamp, and then read the attached filing in full if it looks relevant. The “end of day reports download, quick market snapshot and important announcements” line in the context captures the workflow: scan, shortlist, archive. A practical implication of the “table is now unsorted” remark is that users still need to cross-check by symbol, date, and disclosure type. Another implication is that document titles can be long and technical, so having consistent tags like Regulation 30, Regulation 7(2), transcript, NAV, or Reg. 32 helps reduce confusion. The context also shows that many items are administrative updates, which investors can log without immediately changing a view on a stock. At the same time, dashboards help ensure those administrative updates are not missed, especially when follow-up disclosures arrive later. Users often mention that the discipline of checking disclosures can be more valuable than reacting to social media summaries. In that sense, dashboards are becoming a bridge between public filings and retail research routines.

Frequently Asked Questions

It is a consolidated view of exchange disclosures showing fields like symbol, regulation type, filing links, broadcast time, and sometimes XBRL download links.
The shared context referenced SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 2015, specifically Regulation 7(2) read with Regulation 6(2).
Regulation 30 disclosures are exchange intimations about material events and updates, and investors track them because they often contain governance, structural, or process changes.
XBRL is a structured file format that some users prefer for organizing and parsing disclosures, while the “Details” link is typically a standard document attachment.
It benchmarks voluntary, non-financial disclosures of the top 100 listed companies across Leadership and Governance Quality and Risk Disclosure Quality using annual reports, BRSR filings, and company websites.

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