HomeNewsBusinessMarketsExcitement high but execution lags: Fund managers flag banking and tax hurdles at GIFT City

Excitement high but execution lags: Fund managers flag banking and tax hurdles at GIFT City

While fund managers are upbeat about GIFT City’s promise as India’s global investment gateway, they admit operational and taxation bottlenecks could hold back the retail expansion.

October 28, 2025 / 18:18 IST
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GIFT City
GIFT City

There is palpable buzz across the Indian mutual fund industry about the potential of GIFT City’s International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) as a dual-way gateway: not just for foreign inflows, but increasingly for Indian investors to invest overseas. At the recent Moneycontrol Mutual Fund Summit, Bangalore Edition, panel experts laid out that optimism while also flagging what they say are key operational drag-points.

“Access for Indian residents” meets “banking infrastructure gap”
Vaibhav Shah of Mirae Asset Investment Managers captured the shift in language: “GIFT City is now… not only able to attract global capital into India but allowing access for Indian residents to invest globally.” On paper, this signals a major inflection: a jurisdiction once pitched purely as an inward-capital hub is morphing into a “local-plus-global” platform.

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But Shah didn’t shy away from admitting: execution still matters. “The banking system in GIFT City is not as robust as we have the mutual fund payment system… once we can solve that, retail can become very, very large,” he said. He further emphasised the transfer side: all flows into these global-investment vehicles are still subject to the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) cap — and understanding of that route remains low among retail investors.

Minimums slashed, but onboarding must catch up
Neil Parekh of PPFAS Mutual Fund lifted out another moment: “Today, we can launch retail funds out of GIFT City as low as $5,000 and $10,000… retail participation can be there.”