HomeNewsBusinessMarketsProposed brokerage fee cap may be the biggest jolt for mutual funds in Sebi’s regulatory overhaul

Proposed brokerage fee cap may be the biggest jolt for mutual funds in Sebi’s regulatory overhaul

Industry executives are expecting a pushback from both AMCs and brokerages, as it may tighten margins. Sebi has sought feedback on the draft regulations from stakeholders by November 17, 2025.

October 29, 2025 / 15:17 IST
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SEBI has invited public comments on the draft until November 17, 2025.
SEBI has invited public comments on the draft until November 17, 2025.

Capital market regulator Sebi’s proposal to sharply reduce brokerage and transaction cost for mutual funds is emerging as the most consequential - and contentious - reform in its plan to tweak regulations in pursuit of ease of business and transparency.

The consultation paper released on October 28 has proposed that mutual funds will be allowed to charge a maximum of only 0.02 percent of equity trades and 0.01 percent of derivatives trades outside the Total Expense Ratio (TER). Any excess brokerage must be within the TER, a move that is expected to put pressure on asset managers and hit institutional broker revenue. Read More

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Deepak Shenoy, founder of Capitalmind AMC posted on social media that the move would prevent investors from being “double-charged” for research. “Research should come from AMC management fees, not from investors’ pockets again through brokerage,” he said. “If an AMC pays more than 2 bps for equities or 1 bp for derivatives, the excess must come from within the TER. It’s a good move - it will push transaction costs lower and bring more transparency.”

Read More: HDFC AMC, Nuvama, Motilal Oswal, other capital market stocks fall as Sebi proposes fee changes