Business Standard

FRANKLIN MF ORDERED TO PAY ~9,122 CRORE TO ITS UNITHOLDER­S

- ASHLEY COUTINHO Mumbai , 2 February

The Supreme Court on Tuesday directed Franklin Templeton (FT) Mutual Fund to disburse ~9,122 crore to unitholder­s of its six debt schemes that were shut. SBI Mutual Fund has been entrusted the responsibi­lity of disbursing the amount. The money has to be distribute­d to unitholder­s in 20 days.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday directed Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund to disburse ~9,122 crore to the unitholder­s of its six shut debt schemes. SBI Mutual Fund has been entrusted the responsibi­lity of disbursing the amount.

The money has to be distribute­d among unitholder­s in 20 days and the parties are at liberty to move applicatio­ns in case of difficulti­es arising out of the process.

“We believe the distributi­on of monies will provide unitholder­s with much-needed liquidity and look forward to working with the regulator and SBI Mutual Fund to distribute the cash within the period stipulated by the Court,” said a Franklin Templeton spokespers­on.

The six schemes had received a total cash flow of ~14,391 crore until January 29, 2021 from maturities, coupons, and prepayment­s.

The number of cash-positive schemes stands at five and these have ~9,770 crore cash available to return to the unitholder­s, subject to fund running expenses. The balance ~4,621 crore has been used to repay borrowings and interest thereon of the six schemes.

Franklin India Low Duration Fund, Franklin India Ultra Short Bond Fund, Franklin India Dynamic Accrual Fund, Franklin India Credit Risk Fund, and Franklin India Short Term Income Plan have 65 per cent, 53 per cent, 41 per cent, 27 per cent and 11 per cent of their respective AUM in cash.

The asset manager had shut six debt schemes on April 23 last year, citing redemption pressure and lack of liquidity in the debt market.

The apex court in December had issued an interim order allowing the trustees of the mutual fund to seek consent of the unitholder­s for winding up the six debt schemes under Section 18(15)(c) of the Sebi (Mutual Fund) Regulation, 1996. Redemption­s would remain suspended until further notice.

In October, the Karnataka High Court had ruled Franklin Templeton trustees’ decision to wind up the schemes could not be implemente­d without nod from the unitholder­s. Last month, the investors in the six shut debt schemes had voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of their shutting down.

The asset manager has been assuring investors that the move would enable monetisati­on of the papers faster, while preserving the value of their investment­s as market conditions had become a lot more conducive.

 ??  ?? The number of cash-positive schemes stands at five and these have ~9,770 crore cash available to return to unitholder­s
The number of cash-positive schemes stands at five and these have ~9,770 crore cash available to return to unitholder­s

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