Why in news?
The Securities and Exchange Board of India introduced a new asset class called the Specialised Investment Fund (SIF). This category allows mutual funds to offer long–short strategies similar to hedge funds to sophisticated investors. The regulations came into force in April 2025 and were widely discussed in financial circles for bringing alternative investment approaches under the mutual fund umbrella.
Background
SEBI oversees India’s capital markets and regulates mutual funds. Traditional open‑ended schemes invest predominantly in equities or bonds. To broaden products available to high‑net‑worth investors, SEBI created the SIF category. These funds can take both long and short positions in equity or debt using derivatives. The regulator requires separate branding for SIFs to avoid confusion with regular schemes and imposes strict eligibility criteria on fund managers.
Key provisions
- Eligibility: An asset management company must have a three‑year track record and average assets under management of ₹10,000 crore, or employ a chief investment officer and fund manager with at least five years’ experience in managing public funds.
- Minimum investment: Investors must commit at least ₹10 lakh per scheme. They also sign a risk disclosure acknowledging the complex strategies and potential losses.
- Investment strategies: SIFs may pursue equity long‑ short, sector rotation, debt long‑short or hybrid strategies. They can use derivatives but the total exposure to derivatives cannot exceed twenty‑five percent of the fund’s net assets.
- Redemption and listing: Schemes may be open‑ or closed‑ended. Closed‑ended SIFs may be listed on stock exchanges after a three‑year lock‑in period to provide liquidity to investors.
- Risk management: SIFs must maintain separate identification from other mutual fund schemes, appoint a dedicated compliance officer and submit periodic risk reports to SEBI.
Conclusion
The SIF framework expands India’s mutual fund landscape by allowing hedge fund‑like strategies within a regulated environment. While the new category provides greater choice for wealthy investors, it also demands strong risk management and investor education due to the complexity of long–short products.