Business Standard

Sebi seeks details of MFs’ exposure

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY & JASH KRIPLANI

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has sought details of investment and exposure in the debt-ridden Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) group from major asset management companies (AMCs) and other financial institutio­ns.

Sebi wrote to fund houses and other institutio­ns on September 22, asking them to furnish informatio­n with respect to investment­s in IL&FS group companies in their portfolio, said an official.

These fund houses have been asked to specify their exposure in IL&FS and its associate entities. The details include portfolio management service name, registrati­on number, and securities details such as maturity time, and amount invested along with the valuation as of date, based on market value, the official added.

The fund houses were directed to give the informatio­n in a prescribed format, even if there was no investment. They will have to share the compiled data with Sebi and the stock exchanges.

Rating agency Icra has downgraded IL&FS' debt to default, putting the spotlight on asset managers who have an exposure of ~29 billion to outstandin­g debt issued by the stressed company and its subsidiari­es. This sudden crisis has created a panic-like situation among debt fund managers and is making them take pre-emptive action against possible risks in their portfolios.

■ MFs asked to furnish names of PMS, amount invested, and maturity time

■ Amfi, Sebi to meet on Friday to discuss the current liquidity situation

■ ~29 billion: Estimated MFs' exposure to IL&FS and subsidiari­es

■ ~500 billion: Net outflow from debt schemes in this fiscal year

■ MFs are finding it difficult to generate cash as the liquidity crisis is making it difficult to offload low-duration commercial paper The debt schemes are also staring at redemption from large corporate investors, resulting in money managers shoring up cash levels through asset sales.

To address these concerns, Sebi is set to meet mutual fund (MF) industry body Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi) on Friday. Sources say the industry body is likely to make key changes in the existing MF norms to improve their riskmanage­ment practices.

One of the discussion points is likely to be around how openended schemes can ensure enough liquidity in dealing with redemption­s, said a source.

According to an executive of a large fund house, the industry is concerned that the liquidity tightness created by the IL&FS crisis may have deeper ramificati­ons. "There is a systemic colour to the IL&FS crisis. If not addressed credibly, things can spiral out of control. The corporate bond market doesn't have much depth," said a fund manager. The contagion risk from IL&FS' default came into the spotlight when DSP MF sold Dewan Housing Finance's debt papers at 11 per cent yield last week. Experts say this exercise of pre-empting risks can hurt housing finance companies (HFCs) with asset liability mismatches and high leverage on their books. If this situation does not improve, the spillover effect can extend beyond NBFCs (non-banking financial companies) to manufactur­ing firms, who could soon start facing the heat, a fund manager said. Redemption pressure has complicate­d the situation with some fund houses even looking to borrow from banks to meet redemption­s in liquid and debt schemes, according to sources. Fund houses are finding it difficult to generate cash as lack of liquidity is making it difficult to offload commercial papers of duration as low as one or two days.

Typically, MFs face redemption­s in September as corporates take out funds to settle their tax obligation­s. The IL&FS event has made some large corporate investors in debt schemes nervous. The investor sentiment on debt schemes was weak, with such schemes seeing a net outflow of more than ~500 billion in this fiscal year as yields have hardened.

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