Business Standard

Get more investors, Sebi tells pvt unlisted Invits

Market regulator is concerned that this vehicle could be used to circumvent tax requiremen­ts

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA Mumbai, 2 June

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is carefully scrutinisi­ng applicatio­ns for private unlisted infrastruc­ture investment trusts (Invits) that have limited investors, and has informally asked them to broaden their investor base before it grants them approval, said two people familiar with the matter.

Sebi is concerned that this vehicle could be used to circumvent tax requiremen­ts, according to one of the sources. “It has apparently been informed that people are structurin­g investment­s through Invits to avoid tax,” said one of the people.

A second person confirmed the move.

An INVIT is an investment vehicle that holds infrastruc­ture assets such as roads or power plants. The cash flow from the underlying asset is used to pay investors who have bought units in the INVIT. It is considered a useful way to monetise such assets, and also raise money for funding infrastruc­ture projects.

“[Invits] are a key way in which private developers could monetise their investment­s in infrastruc­ture projects to enable them to raise cash for new project developmen­t. The Indian INVIT market is not yet mature and has supported formation of 10 Invits till date of which only two are listed,” noted the report of the Task Force on National Infrastruc­ture Pipeline for 2019-2025.

It added that regulation­s could be tweaked to enable funding of private and public infrastruc­ture through Invits. Care should be taken to ensure safeguards on double financing and ever-greening of loans, the report had said.

The regulator recently made it easier for Invits to raise additional capital through a rights issue, by which existing investors can invest more money in line with their holding.

“In order to enable unlisted Invits to raise further funds, it has been decided to provide a mechanism for raising of funds by unlisted Invits through rights issue of units...the minimum allotment to any investor shall be ~1 crore,” said the November 2020 circular.

Funding of infrastruc­ture has been a focus area for authoritie­s in recent times. The task force report cited above pegged the need for money in the segment at around ~111 trillion (see chart). A significan­t part of this is also to come through the private sector, according to data from the Economic Survey of 2020-21.

Sometimes, large chunks of such investment vehicles are owned by investors such as pension funds. This can be considered broad-based because the ultimate beneficiar­ies are dispersed, according to one of the sources. It was unclear if the regulator’s requiremen­t for more investors applied to Invits with such large investors, or to those with other private players where the ultimate beneficiar­ies aren’t so numerous.

The assets managed by Invits and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITS) have grown at a compound annual growth rate of 42 per cent since FY18 to around ~2 trillion, according to a note from Mumbai-based Crisil Ratings in January.

“Globally, even lower-rated Invits and REITS are accepted. For instance, 12...(per cent)...of S&P Global’s rated REITS in the US are in the ‘BB’ category, while 77... (per cent)...are in the ‘BBB’ category. To be sure, these ratings are on their bank loans, or debt instrument­s, indicating the likelihood of timely payment of the obligation under the rated instrument – and not a comment on the potential returns to unitholder­s, which are anyway subservien­t to debt,” it said.

An email sent to Sebi did not immediatel­y receive a reply.

 ??  ??
 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India