HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceSEBI makes unitholders’ consent a must for winding up mutual fund scheme

SEBI makes unitholders’ consent a must for winding up mutual fund scheme

If unitholders vote against winding-up, scheme will be re-opened, said the regulator.

December 28, 2021 / 17:44 IST
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In the Frankin Templeton case, Supreme Court upheld that unitholders' consent was necessary.
In the Frankin Templeton case, Supreme Court upheld that unitholders' consent was necessary.

The market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in its board meeting on December 28, made it mandatory for mutual fund (MF) trustees to take consent of unitholders’ when winding-up any MF scheme.

Franklin Templeton MF’s decision to wind-up six of its schemes in April 2020, had forced unitholders to move courts to question the legality of such a decision.

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In the year-long legal tussle, the Supreme Court (SC) eventually upheld that unitholders’ approval was necessary for winding-up of any MF scheme.

SEBI in its board meeting stated that “the trustees shall obtain consent of the unitholders by simple majority of the unitholders present and voting on the basis of one vote per unit.”