HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceAT1 and Tier 2 bonds may not be too risky for debt funds, but SEBI is taking no chances

AT1 and Tier 2 bonds may not be too risky for debt funds, but SEBI is taking no chances

SEBI has asked MFs to value such bonds as having a 100-year tenor, which may result in a fall in debt fund NAVs

March 15, 2021 / 09:49 IST
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A Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) circular issued on March 10 created a furore among debt funds. According to the circular, the value of all Additional Tier 1 (AT1) and Tier 2 bonds were to be treated as 100-year maturity instruments. Additionally, it put three conditions: A scheme shall not invest more than 5 per cent of its corpus in such securities issued by a single issuer and 10 percent in all such instruments, put together. Additionally, a fund house must not hold more than 10 percent in such securities of a single issuer. On March 11, the finance ministry advised SEBI to roll back the clause in the circular that mandates fund houses to value such bonds as 100-year tenor. But on March 12, the Association of Mutual Funds of India (AMFI) issued a press release saying that it agrees with SEBI’s directives on perpetual bonds. What is the fuss about?

How risky are AT1 and Tier 2 bonds?

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SEBI is of the opinion that these securities are risky. And therefore, the net asset values (NAV) of debt funds that invest in them must reflect the risk levels these securities carry.

When debt funds invest in a security, they expect to earn an interest income throughout the instrument’s tenure. The principal amount is paid at maturity. If the organisation goes bankrupt or gets into a financial trouble, the instruments should accord priority to debt funds in paying dues. But not all instruments are at the same priority level when the borrowing firm needs to repay its creditors.