Business Standard

Regulated entities can now invest as Category-ii FPIS

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

Regulated entities such as banks, asset management companies, and portfolio managers have been given the nod to undertake investment­s on behalf of their clients as Category-ii foreign portfolio investors (FPIS).

This is in addition to undertakin­g proprietar­y investment by taking separate registrati­ons as category-i FPIS.

Until now, private banks had to pool money from different clients and set up a fund to invest money after separately registerin­g as an FPI. With change in the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) operating guidelines, every client need not take a separate registrati­on. The entities — be it private banks, asset or portfolio managers — can invest on behalf of these clients separately.

In case such entities are undertakin­g investment­s on behalf of their clients, Category-ii FPI registrati­on will be granted, provided the clients of the FPI are individual­s and family offices.

Clients of the FPI should also be eligible for registrati­on as FPIS and should not be dealing on behalf of a third party. An FPI has to provide investor details of clients quarterly.

“Foreign individual­s and family houses have been allowed to invest through private banks and other regulated FPIS without the need to separately register as FPIS in India. Sebi has removed the restrictio­n of requiring such FPIS to pool the client funds in one account,” said Rajesh Gandhi, partner, Deloitte India.

L et’s consider a private bank in Switzerlan­d which has taken an FPI licence in India. Until early 2018, the private bank could invest only proprietar­y money. That changed after the regulator issued guidelines in February 2018, allowing private and merchant banks to invest on behalf of their clients.

The current guidelines have permitted entities such as asset management companies, investment man

agers, investment advisors, portfolio managers, insurance & reinsuranc­e entities, broker dealers, and swap dealers to undertake investment­s on behalf of their clients as Category-ii FPIS.

“While reiteratin­g the position in its earlier circulars permitting private, investment banks and other similar institutio­ns to invest on behalf of its clients, the operating guidelines do away with the condition of these institutio­ns being broad-based and having a common portfolio.

This will give a lot of flexibilit­y to them to inve st, bas ed on different client strategie s. S ebi, however, requires a reporting of client details on a quarterly basis,” said Tejas Desai, par tner, EY India. M oreover, FPIS from a financial action task force member country are permitted to do the KYC of clients in accordance with the requiremen­ts of the home jurisdicti­on of the FPI.

Separately, the regulator has made life easier for sovereign wealth funds, pension funds and endowment funds that typically invest through multiple investment manager (MIM) structures.

About 25 per cent of FPI investment­s are made through such structures. MIM structures need not fill out forms every time a new external investment manager is added but a simple request letter will suffice.

“In case of MIM structures, if the entity has already furnished registrati­on details to a designated depository participan­t at the time of registrati­on, then the entity will not be required to provide the registrati­on details again for each new FPI registrati­on under this structure,” observed the Sebi guidelines.

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