Under the new rules, liquid schemes will now have to maintain at least 20 per cent in liquid assets including cash, government securities (g-secs), treasury bills, and repo on g-secs. Their sectoral investment cap has been cut from 25 per cent to 20 per cent, and the additional exposure to housing finance companies stands reduced from 15 per cent to 10 per cent. Valuation of papers can no longer be done on amortisation but on a mark-to-market basis. It has also restricted investments of a scheme in debt and money market instruments having credit enhancements of a particular group to 10 per cent and 5 per cent, respectively. In mutual funds’ investments in debt securities having credit enhancements backed by equities, Sebi has raised the security cover to at least four times. It has also disallowed the use of a fund house’s own trades for valuation in case of inter-scheme transfer.
It’s clear that both corporate and retail investors will see their returns from debt funds come down and promoters are likely to find it tough to raise money as refinancing will become tougher. But it’s better to be safe than sorry when retail investors are involved. With some key loopholes plugged, Sebi’s new proposals ensure that mutual funds do not step out of line and go a reasonable distance in protecting the investor. After all, mutual funds are not banks and their job is to invest on behalf of their unitholders. The Sebi chief is right in saying that the regulator does not recognise standstill agreements between fund houses and defaulting promoters, a practice that needed to be stopped.
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