Tata AMC exits AIFs amid tax pressure, specialized fund competition
investment funds that invest in alternative assets such as private equity, hedge funds and other non-traditional investments beyond traditional stocks and bonds, with wealthy individuals and institutions as their main investors. Regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), there are three categories of AIFs in the country, with Category III AIFs focusing on high-risk, high-return trading strategies using leverage.Tata AMC entered the Category III AIF space in 2019 with its Absolute Return Fund, a conservative long-short strategy.
In 2020, it launched the Equity Plus Absolute Return Fund. Both vehicles offered hedge fund–style strategies, long-short equity with limited leverage, targeted at high-net-worth investors.“They are planning to return investors' money by March.
A letter to clients was sent on 17th February about the closing of the fund, and the same was disclosed to Sebi,” the executive cited above said.Category III AIFs received commitments worth ₹3.11 trillion and raised a total of ₹1.96 trillion as of December 2025, according to Sebi.“You speak to any HNI (high-net-worth individual), they will always invest in the more tax-efficient fund. It doesn't make sense with taxation to keep the AIF.
Read on livemint.com