NSEL Investors Forum represents 13,000 investors, whose money is stuck following the payment crisis at the National Spot Exchange Ltd, a subsidiary of FTIL.
"Shah's arrest was long over due. His arrest will scare defaulters and force them to pay the money at the earliest," Forum Secretary Arun Dalmia told PTI.
The entire money would have been recovered if was Shah was arrested in August last year. The payment default would have been only Rs 2,000 crore had the government taken action way back in 2012, he added.
Shah's FTIL owns NSEL, a spot commodities exchange that is under investigation by the police and regulators after it struggled to settle outstanding contracts worth Rs 5,600 crore.
NSEL's payment troubles began after it was ordered by the government in July last year to suspend spot trade in most of its contracts due to suspected trading violations.
The exchange could not settle the outstanding trades, sparking investigations by the police and regulators to find out whether the exchange had defrauded traders by not enforcing rules requiring sufficient collateral to be set aside.
FTIL owns 99.9 per cent of NSEL, which has suspended all trading operations since the payment shortages.
