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SEBI's New Rules on Liquid Funds

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March 05, 2019

Why in news?

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) proposed new rules related to liquid funds, in its recent Board meeting.

What is a liquid fund?

  • Liquid fund is a category of mutual fund which invests primarily in money market instruments like certificate of deposits, treasury bills, commercial papers and term deposits.
  • Mutual Fund (MF) is an investment vehicle made up of a pool of moneys collected from public investors.
  • The pooled money is used to buy other securities by professional money managers.
  • It gives small or individual investors access to professionally managed portfolios of equities, bonds and other securities.

What are the benefits of liquid funds?

  • Liquid funds invest in securities with a residual maturity of up to 91 days.
  • Liquid funds have the lowest interest rate risk among debt funds as they primarily invest in fixed income securities with short maturity.
  • Lower maturity period of these underlying assets helps a fund manager in meeting the redemption demand from investors.
  • Liquid funds do not have a lock-in period (period during which a loan cannot be paid-off earlier than scheduled without incurring penalties).
  • So assets invested are not tied up for a long time.
  • Withdrawals from liquid funds are processed within 24 hours on business days.

What are the new rules?

  • The new rules come in light of the redemption risks faced by liquid schemes after the Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) crisis.
  • Valuation - SEBI tightened the valuation methodology for liquid mutual funds (MFs).
  • SEBI’s new rule requires debt funds to use the more transparent mark-to-market valuation rather than the amortisation method to value debt securities.
  • [Amortisation is an accounting term that refers to the process of allocating the cost of an intangible asset over a period of time.
  • Mark-to-market is an accounting practice that involves recording the value of an asset to reflect its current market levels.]
  • Open offer - [An open offer can take place if any of the promoters of a company want to increase the stake or if non-promoters increase the stake to 15% or the company is going to de-list from the stock exchange.
  • So open offer is nothing but the exit route given to the existing shareholders by the acquirer of shares, through a public announcement.
  • The price is fixed based on the average price for the last 6 months and usually the price is higher than the prevailing market price.
  • This works as a motivation to current shareholders to sell their shares.]
  • Earlier, SEBI had the power to grant exemption from the obligation to make an open offer for acquiring shares.
  • The target company shall file an application with the SEBI, giving details of the proposed acquisition and the grounds on which the exemption has been sought.
  • SEBI has now done away with the open offer exemption given to those seeking to acquire assets of firms undergoing resolution plan under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).
  • It has restricted open offer exemptions to only scheduled commercial banks and financial institutions in debt restructuring cases.
  • SEBI also said that only a court or a tribunal is allowed to provide any such exemptions.
  • Open offer exemption already given to companies undergoing resolution plan under IBC will continue in supervision of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT).
  • Maturity - All debt papers with maturity of 30 days or more (earlier 60-day maturity) has to be marked to market.
  • This is to make sure that liquid schemes reflect the underlying portfolio risks.

What would the impact be?

  • Liquid funds are a major source of short-term borrowings for Indian companies.
  • If mutual funds now demand 30-day paper in place of 60-day or 90-day instruments, companies may be forced to roll over their debt more frequently.
  • Holding shorter-maturity papers means more transactions and more portfolio turnover.
  • This along with the stamp duty will significantly increase the transaction costs for liquid schemes.
  • The changes are thus likely to make managing liquid schemes a costly affair for MFs.
  • Besides, the returns for liquid schemes could moderate as shorter-duration papers typically have lower yields.
  • The move on open offer exemption would increase the cost of acquisition for those buying listed stressed firms.

 

Source: Business Standard, BusinessLine

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