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HomeNewsBusinessPersonal Finance'Taking credit risks in liquid funds not the right thing to do': BoI AXA

'Taking credit risks in liquid funds not the right thing to do': BoI AXA

Credit events usually happen when the economy does not do well. We are not out of the problem fully. More trouble cannot be ruled out, though most of it is behind us.

June 22, 2019 / 12:00 IST
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BOI-Axa’s Credit Risk Fund was in the focus for all the wrong reasons. The recent fall in its net asset value after a credit event resulted in a 29 per cent loss on a one-year basis, placing the scheme at the bottom of the category. Many issuers are fighting the tight liquidity in the system. Despite the cuts in policy rates by the Reserve Bank of India and fall in benchmark bond yield, there is not much respite for debt investors. In this backdrop, Alok Singh, chief investment officer of BOI-Axa Asset Management Company shares his views on some of these issues.

 BOI Axa Credit Risk Fund’s NAV has declined 29 per cent over past one year and is at the bottom of the returns table. What went wrong and how do you plan to tide over the situation?

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Since its inception in February 2015, BOI Axa Credit Risk Fund has been managed like a focussed fund. Though the concentration of issuers meant high risk, it also allowed effective monitoring. The fund did well till August 2018. In September 2018, the Infrastructure Leasing & Finance Services (IL&FS) default happened and since then the credit markets have been quite volatile. The yields in the financial markets went up and investments in our portfolios turned illiquid. The yield on our portfolio moved up from 11 per cent in the pre-crisis days to around 16 per cent by the end of May 2019. We saw redemptions in our scheme, as a result of which the exposure to Sintex BAPL was in excess of 20 per cent, while it was at 9 per cent of our portfolio earlier. At the same time, there was a credit event at Sintex Industries—a group company of Sintex BAPL. There is no direct link between the two and we are the senior secured debt holder in Sintex BAPL. We anticipated a contagion. We thought that it will certainly affect secondary market liquidity of our investments in Sintex BAPL. We wanted to factor in the illiquidity of the bond and hence opted for a haircut to the extent of 55 per cent.

We have not entered into any other agreement with the issuer. We hold the bonds and current NAV reflects the decreased market value of the bonds, though it may sound theoretical. We continue to hold the bond and as the issuer pays us back on the date of maturity or before, the NAV will be reinstated. The NAV will also be reinstated if there is a credit rating upgrade in this case.  We are monitoring the Sintex BAPL situation and ensuring that our interests are protected.