HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceSEBI Circular: Liquid and overnight fund portfolios to become more transparent; but exit loads will apply for early redemption

SEBI Circular: Liquid and overnight fund portfolios to become more transparent; but exit loads will apply for early redemption

From April 1, 2020, liquid funds shall invest a minimum of 20 per cent in ‘liquid assets,’ defined as Cash, Government Securities, T-bills and Repo on Government Securities.

September 23, 2019 / 15:29 IST
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 SEBI has tweaked some fund management regulations for the liquid and overnight funds categories, through a Circular issued on September 20.

Here, we discuss these changes and focus on how these impact you. To start with, liquid funds are defined as money-market funds investing in instruments maturing within 91 days. For daily NAV computation, the valuation of the instruments with a maturity period of over 30 days is provided by rating agencies CRISIL and ICRA. For instruments maturing within a maximum of 30 days, valuation for daily NAV purposes happens on an amortization basis; that is, returns come from the accrual only, without the mark-to-market impact.

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New rules apply

The Circular states that from April 1, 2020, liquid funds shall invest a minimum of 20 per cent in ‘liquid assets,’ defined as Cash, Government Securities, T-bills and Repo on Government Securities. It is a prudent step to have 20 per cent in liquid assets of good credit quality, which would be useful in meeting redemption pressures. The concept is similar to that of SLR for Banks, which is a mandatory holding of good-quality liquid assets. The liquid fund industry has managed redemption pressures, even when system liquidity has been tight and redemptions have been heavy, at more than 20 per cent of their corpus. As and when this measure becomes effective, it will improve the portfolio quality and liquidity of any fund that has not been consistent in maintaining portfolio quality.