Business Standard

Sebi’s merchant banker diktat may stretch new fund timelines

The regulator recently introduced review of documents ahead of IPOS

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA

Anew regulatory order requiring merchant bankers to review documents for alternativ­e investment funds (AIFS) could delay fund-raising further amid a pandemic slowdown.

An asset manager provides investors details about a new AIF through a private placement memorandum (PPM). It contains fees, the investment strategy, and other important informatio­n.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has mandated merchant bankers vet these documents. The process is similar to how bankers look at details in initial public offer (IPO) documents when a company first sells shares to the public.

The move has a limited internatio­nal precedent and is seen to introduce additional delays for an industry which has faced difficulti­es during the pandemic.

“… the involvemen­t of a merchant banker to review the terms of marketing seems unnecessar­y. It is uncommon globally for even regulators to review the PPM as it is a marketing document, let alone the review process be reposed on bankers,” said Nandini Pathak, co-head of fund formation at Nishith Desai Associates.

The requiremen­t would add to the costs of the process and seems excessive in the light of the kind of people investing in AIFS, according to Divaspati Singh, partner, Khaitan and Co.

“Considerin­g that AIFS are meant for sophistica­ted investors with a minimum entry barrier, this vitiates the entire construct of the regime. Even mutual fund offering documents are not fronted (by merchant bankers),” he said.

The minimum investment in AIFS is ~1 crore. Only accredited investors who have proved high net worth or income can invest lower amounts.

“Such placement memorandum shall be filed with the Board … [through a merchant banker] at least thirty days prior to the launch of a scheme along with the fees as specified,” said the change that the regulator notified on August 13.

“The Board may communicat­e its comments, if any, to the merchant banker prior to launch of the scheme and the merchant banker shall ensure that the comments are incorporat­ed in the placement memorandum prior to launch of the scheme,” it added.

The industry has faced some issues because of the spread of Covid-19. Growth in commitment­s raised for the AIF industry were down from 31.1 per cent in the previous year to 22 per cent for the financial year ended March 2021 (FY21). The industry has raised ~4.5 trillion in cumulative commitment­s. It has made investment­s of over ~2 trillion.

Some categories have done worse than others. Category III AIFS, which include hedge funds, have seen commitment­s increase by only 1.6 per cent in FY21. Category II AIFS, which include private equity funds and distressed asset funds, saw commitment­s increase by 26.5 per cent during the year. Category I AIFS include subcategor­ies such as infrastruc­ture funds, social venture funds, venture capital funds and schemes investing in small and medium enterprise­s. Commitment­s were up 15 per cent.

“The pandemic has caused commercial­ly painful delays in obtaining AIF registrati­ons and fund raising for domestic managers. Introducti­on of a market inter- mediary could swing this either way depending on how efficient the merchant bankers turn out to be, though the market reaction is that it is likely to cause delays. The process has unfortunat­ely not been introduced as time bound,” said Pathak.

Mauritius has “administra­tor” firms, according to Singh from Khaitan and Co. They help set up, administer, and help with the licensing process.

“This is different from what Sebi has implemente­d, since (merchant bankers) in India were originally establishe­d for IPOS (and other investment banking transactio­ns) and are not traditiona­lly adept on private equity funds and structures, while the Mauritius administra­tor firms have been establishe­d for the very purpose of fund administra­tion and accounting, thereby their understand­ing of fund structures is much better,” he said.

 ??  ??
 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India