HomeNewsOpinionFunds Gate | Fund houses avoid side-pocketing to protect their pockets ahead of unitholders’

Funds Gate | Fund houses avoid side-pocketing to protect their pockets ahead of unitholders’

Mutual funds had an opportunity to demonstrate that they put their unitholders interests ahead of theirs. Sadly, barring an exception they did not walk the talk

June 12, 2019 / 13:02 IST
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The Rs 24 trillion Indian mutual fund (MF) industry may have many attributes that it can boast of, but sadly, standardisation is not one of them.

After Dewan Housing Finance (DHFL) defaulted on its interest payments on 4 June- and the subsequent downgrades by credit rating firms on 5 June- different fund houses chose different ways to deal with the crisis and stem the rot.

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Tata Asset Management was the only fund house that segregated the bad asset (DHFL papers) under a rule called side-pocketing in MF industry parlance. Other fund houses have either chosen to restrict inflows or just imposed exit loads on investors who choose to come after the DHFL crisis enfolded last week. In doing so, most of the affected fund houses- with the exception of Tata Asset Management- appear to have put their own interests ahead of their investors’.

And here’s what is ironic.