The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) decided to allow mutual funds to create segregated portfolios with respect to debt and money market instruments in case of credit events while ensuring fair treatment to all unit holders.
Creation of segregated portfolios is a mechanism to separate distressed, illiquid and hard-to-value assets from other more liquid assets in a portfolio. It prevents the distressed assets from damaging the returns generated from more liquid and better-performing assets.
With a segregated portfolio, investors who may take the hit when the credit event happens shall get the upside of future recovery, SEBI said in a statement.
The board has cleared a proposal “to allow mutual funds to create segregated portfolios with respect to debt and money market instruments subject to various safeguards”, the statement said.
A credit event is marked by any change that negatively impacts a borrower’s capacity to meet payment obligations in cases like default, bankruptcy etc.
As per the regulator, the new facility will be available to mutual funds based on credit events at issuer level. It may be optional for mutual funds to exercise such mechanism.
Further, activation of the new mechanism may be subject to trustee approval.
“The board also took note of the proposal to review the valuation norms applicable to mutual fund schemes investing in debt and money market instruments,” the regulator noted.
The approval comes in the wake of the liquidity squeeze triggered by the Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) default.
IL&FS and its subsidiaries have defaulted on several debt repayments recently due to liquidity crisis. The company as of March 2018 owed over Rs 91,000 crore to banks and other creditors.
A credit event in even one issuer or group could lead to significant liquidity risk in the entire country, which in turn can lead to further volatility in the market.
Accordingly, a need was felt to put in place a mechanism to deal with a situation that arises in a mutual fund scheme due to a credit event on a debt security in its portfolio, officials said.
Mutual Fund Advisory Committee (MFAC) has recommended in favour of side-pocketing or creation of segregated portfolios.
Currently, in the absence of segregation of portfolios from distressed, illiquid assets from other more liquid assets in a portfolio, in case of credit events, the existing investors potentially lose all the value.
Any further recovery accrues to the investors in the scheme at the time of recovery.