Business Standard

Sebi wants mutual funds to be more clear on risks

Regulator directs Amfi to clearly state that MFs are not a substitute for bank savings accounts in their ad campaign

- JASH KRIPLANI

Sebi wants mutual fund companies to be more clear while highlighti­ng the risks associated with such investment­s. Sebi Chairman Ajay Tyagi said, “MF investment is not a substitute for a bank savings account. That should be said straightaw­ay.” JASH KRIPLANI writes

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) wants mutual fund (MF) companies to be more clear while highlighti­ng the risks associated with such investment­s.

On the sidelines of the mutual fund summit on Thursday, Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi had said, “MF investment is not a substitute for a bank savings account. That is obvious. But that should also be said straight away. This is important to make sure investors have the right set of expectatio­ns.”

“The regulator’s point is well-taken. We are also having internal discussion­s to work out ways in which risks can be highlighte­d more clearly, in a way that even someone completely new to mutual funds can understand the associated risks,” said Ashutosh Bishnoi, director at Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi) and managing director of Mahindra MF.

The market regulator feels that the present ad campaigns need to do more when it comes to highlighti­ng the short-term risks of MF investment­s. Sebi has also asked asset management companies to be more alert to the credit and liquidity risks in their debt schemes.

Fund managers say debt products, which don’t gain much attention from retail investors otherwise, can be looked at in the current market environmen­t.

“One of the important lessons of investing is asset allocation. So, pick asset classes like debt which have underperfo­rmed equity for five years and invest at the appropriat­e time,” said S Naren, chief investment officer of ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, in an earlier interactio­n.

Amfi data shows that individual investors accounted for 26 per cent of debt-oriented schemes as of July 2018. Liquid and money market schemes, which typically invest in instrument­s with maturity of up to 90 days, had a five per cent share. Meanwhile, individual investors accounted for 70 per cent of equity-oriented schemes.

However, experts said the mix is likely to change.

“I see a lot of retail flows coming this year from fixed deposit investors. Adjusted for tax, fixed income schemes give better return over a three year-period,” A Balasubram­anian, Amfi chairman and chief executive officer of Aditya Birla Sun Life MF, said in a recent interactio­n.

Bishnoi added that as more categories gain traction, industry participan­ts are trying to work out ways to appropriat­ely communicat­e risks for equity, as well as different debt schemes. Industry body Amfi’s Mutual Fund Sahi Hai campaign, that was launched in March 2017, is a collective effort by the industry to educate investors about the various aspects of investing in mutual funds. So far, these ads tried to highlight different options apart from equity products, the importance of discipline­d investing and benefits of direct plans.

According to Sebi’s directives, MFs are required to set apart two basis points (bps) of their net assets towards investor education. Half of this amount, or one bps, is shared with industry body Amfi. Since the launch of the Mutual Fund Sahi Hai campaign, monthly inflows through systematic investment plans (SIPs) have gone up 74 per cent from ~43 billion at the end of March 2017 to ~75 billion as of July 2018.

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