Business Standard

Fund houses’ cut in trail commission to hit advisors

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

Mutual fund (MF) houses have slashed the trail commission paid to distributo­rs and this could hit the income of independen­t financial advisors (IFAs) by up to 15-20 per cent.

On May 29, the additional expense charged in lieu of exit loads by fund schemes was reduced to five basis points (bps), from 20 bps earlier. In 2012, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had permitted fund houses to charge

20 bps of the assets under management of a scheme as compensati­on for ploughing back exit loads.

Fund houses have now gone ahead and reduced the trail commission paid to distributo­rs by up to 15 bps. This reduction will be applicable on existing and future assets.

“Amfi has decided that every fund house should pass on the entire hit of 15 bps to distributo­rs. Distributo­r bodies, however, want the reduction to be done proportion­ately, something the fund houses might not agree to,” said a senior official, on condition of anonymity.

Fund houses differ in how they pay commission­s. Distributo­rs might get a combinatio­n of upfront and trail, only upfront or only trail, depending on their need and clout in the market. Banks and national distributo­rs typically opt for upfront payment; so, the impact of reduction in the trail commission will be low. IFAs, however, have broadly moved to the full trail model and will bear the largest brunt of the recent move.

For a full trail model, the commission could be 100-150 bps for equity schemes and 50-75 bps for debt ones. The best practices guidelines put out by Amfi capped upfront commission at 100 bps from April 1, 2015.

“On a consolidat­ed basis, distributo­rs will see their income going down by 20 per cent, which is significan­t,” said the person quoted earlier.

Experts say distributo­rs will have to rejig their future earnings projection, as they had procured the business after assuming a certain cash flow. “Some fund houses will cut the entire 15 bps of commission; others might not. Everyone is adapting differentl­y. It is for the fund house to decide what it wants to pass back to the distributo­r,” said the chief executive of a fund house.

Notably, fund houses have also been restricted to charging an extra commission of 30 bps for incrementa­l flow from other than the top 30 cities, as opposed to beyond the top 15 cities earlier, from April 1. This means distributo­rs will no longer be able to get the additional commission for fresh inflow from these 15 cities.

The top 15 cities still contribute to about 80 per cent of the MF business.

Experts say distributo­rs will have to rejig their future earnings projection, as they had procured the business after assuming a certain cash flow

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