The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has allowed equity funds to allocate a portion of their portfolios to gold and silver funds, scrapped solution-oriented funds as a category, and introduced sectoral debt funds.
Here are major announcements from the capital markets regulator’s latest exercise in categorisation and rationalisation of mutual fund schemes. As per the Sebi circular dated 26 February, equity mutual funds may allocate up to 35% of their noncore allocation to gold and silver, as well as Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) and debt instruments.

According to Kirttan Shah, founder of Truvanta Wealth, this move gives flexibility to funds that hold high percentages of cash. “Instead of holding cash, which is in debt instruments only, they can take a tactical call in having some exposure to gold or silver. Most funds might not do precious metal allocation, but now there is an option available to them,” Shah said.

In another move, the regulator has allowed fund houses to offer both value and contra funds, subject to the condition that the portfolio overlap between the two schemes should not exceed 50%.

Further, to make funds more ‘true-tothe-label’, Sebi has mandated that a sectoral or thematic equity scheme ensure that no more than 50% of its portfolio overlaps with other equity schemes, whether in the sectoral/thematic category or other equity categories, except for large-cap schemes.

Existing sectoral/thematic schemes will have to ensure compliance regarding portfolio overlap limits within three years.