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MC EXPLAINER How liquid and overnight funds can now help IAs and RAs meet SEBI deposit norms

SEBI has now allowed research analysts and investment advisers to use overnight funds (along with liquid funds) as a compliant form of deposit to meet their regulatory obligations. This offers a flexible, low-risk alternative to traditional fixed deposits.

June 19, 2025 / 14:07 IST
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SEBI's rationale for allowing liquid and overnight funds stems from their inherent features of high liquidity, stability, and integration within the securities market ecosystem.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) at its June 18 board meeting announced it had approved a proposal permitting investment advisers (IAs) and research analysts (RAs) registered with it to use units of liquid mutual funds and overnight funds, marked with a lien in SEBI’s favour, to meet their mandatory deposit requirements. This offers an alternative to the existing norm of maintaining a bank fixed deposit (FD).

What did SEBI suggest in its consultation paper earlier this year?
On January 14, SEBI released a consultation paper to seek public feedback on a proposal aimed at easing compliance requirements for IAs and RAs. As per the current rules, IAs and RAs must maintain an FD with a lien marked in favour of their respective supervisory bodies—IAASB or RAASB. This deposit is meant to cover any unpaid dues arising from dispute resolution proceedings. Many in the industry have reported difficulties in fulfilling the original requirements., so SEBI had proposed allowing IAs and RAs to use liquid mutual fund units instead of fixed deposits to meet the deposit requirement.

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The revised framework was introduced earlier this year. As per that, RAs must maintain a minimum deposit starting from Rs 1 lakh for up to 150 clients, scaling up to Rs 10 lakh for over 1,000 clients, with a similar structure for IAs. These deposits must be maintained on a continuous basis, with compliance deadlines set as April 30, 2025, for RAs and June 30, 2025, for IAs.

What were the industry concerns?