The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), which has been looking into the matter since late 2013, has issued show-cause notices to companies, sources said.
Swiss banking majors UBS and Credit Suisse as well as British financial services giant HSBC are also believed to have come under Sebi's scanner, they added.
A senior official declined to identify the entities being probed, saying it could come in the way of investigations.
He also said irregularities have been noticed in the share prices of 15-20 companies and it is not necessary that the firms or their promoters are involved in wrongdoing.
Some portfolio managers at some banks, which have a significant presence in the Indian financial markets, could have helped clients route money back into the country as foreign funds using investment vehicles across jurisdictions.
"UBS does not comment on market speculation or rumour and, in any case, considers all correspondence with the regulators confidential," Hong Kong-based spokesman Mark Panday said.
Credit Suisse declined to comment, saying the matter is market speculation. An HSBC India spokesperson declined to comment.
Sebi is coordinating with regulators and agencies in India and abroad in this case, where some well-known companies and industrialists are suspected to be involved, they added.
According to sources, while the banks may not have been directly involved, their employees may have dealt with the clients without keeping the banks in the loop.
Sebi is also looking at the possible use of Protected Cell Companies (PCCs) from Mauritius, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands and Seychelles for alleged round-tripping of funds back into the capital market in the form of foreign institutional investor and overseas venture capital money.
PCCs are specially designed entities that may comprise of cells, with funds of various investors, in such a manner that there is legal segregation and protection of assets and liabilities for each cell.
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