investment limit breaches and conflicted deals by larger private equity (PE), venture capital (VC) and domestic hedge funds, the capital markets regulator has called for a slew of details regarding their investments. The Securities & Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Monday asked the custodians of these funds to state the names of investee companies, quantum of each investment, investible surplus on the day of the investment, and whether the investee company is an 'associate' of the fund, among other things.
Sebi is believed to be keeping a close watch on alternative investment funds (AIFs) — the regulatory term for PE and VC houses — as they grow rapidly. AIFs have received close to ₹2 lakh crore of commitments from investors in 2022-23 and ₹1.9 lakh crore in the previous year.
Category I and II AIFs — VC, infrastructure, real estate, PE and stressed asset funds — can invest up to 25% of their investible funds in a single entity.Monitoring Associate Investments Investible funds refers to the scheme corpus net of expenditure for administration and management. The corresponding limit is 10% for Category III AIFs, which can leverage and take exposure to derivatives.
«Monitoring of investible funds and the resultant investment limits has been a key compliance issue for AIFs,» said Tejesh Chitlangi, senior partner at law firm IC Universal Legal. «Many a times, there are breaches that are inadvertent, due to the lack of uniform practice and regulatory clarity on how funds should calculate their fees and expenses during the tenure, and the corresponding investable funds calculation, which is the basis for AIFs to calculate underlying investment limits.» There are several other monitoring issues pertaining to associate
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