Sebi updates MF Norms for ‘True to Label’ Investing

MySandesh
5 Min Read

Big changes are coming for mutual fund investors.

The market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has completely revamped the way mutual fund schemes are categorized and named.

The goal is simple: reduce confusion, improve transparency, and ensure that funds invest exactly as their names suggest.

No More Fancy Names Like “High Return”

Under the new circular, mutual fund scheme names must clearly match their actual category.

Funds can no longer use return-focused words like “high return” or “super growth” in their names.

Sebi wants “true-to-label” investing — meaning what you see in the name is what you get in the portfolio.

Asset Management Companies (AMCs) will also have to disclose portfolio overlaps between:

Equity vs equity schemes

Debt vs debt schemes

Hybrid vs hybrid schemes

All AMCs must comply with the new rules within six months.

Major Changes in Equity Schemes

Sebi has tightened rules for equity mutual funds.

Sectoral and thematic funds cannot have more than 50% portfolio overlap with other equity schemes (except large-cap funds).

Funds have been given three years to reduce overlap:

Year 1: Reduce 35%

Year 2: Reduce another 35%

Year 3: Reduce the remaining 30%

Overlap will be checked every quarter.

Clear minimum investment norms have also been defined:

Large Cap Fund – 80% in large caps

Mid Cap Fund – 65% in mid caps

Small Cap Fund – 65% in small caps

Multi Cap Fund – At least 25% each in large, mid, small caps

Flexi Cap Fund – 65% in equity

Focused Fund – Maximum 30 stocks, 80% in equity

Sectoral/Thematic – 80% in one sector or theme

ELSS – 80% in equity

This reduces ambiguity and forces funds to stick to their mandate.

Clear Structure for Debt Funds

Debt schemes will now follow a strict duration-based structure using Macaulay duration.

Examples include:

Overnight Fund – 1 day maturity

Liquid Fund – Up to 91 days

Short Term Fund – 1 to 3 years

Medium Term Fund – 3 to 4 years

Long Term Fund – More than 7 years

Other rules:

Corporate Bond Fund – 80% in AA+ and above

Credit Risk Fund – 65% in AA and below

Gilt Fund – 80% in government securities

Sectoral debt funds will be allowed only in specific areas like financial services, energy, infrastructure, housing, and real estate.

New Rules for Hybrid Funds

Hybrid schemes also get clearer allocation rules:

Conservative Hybrid – 75–90% debt

Balanced Hybrid – 40–60% equity and debt

Aggressive Hybrid – 65–80% equity

Arbitrage Fund – 65% equity

Equity Savings – Net equity 15–40%

Hybrid funds can now invest some residual portion in InvITs, Gold ETFs, Silver ETFs, and certain derivatives.

Sebi Introduces Life Cycle Funds

One of the biggest announcements is a new category called Life Cycle Funds.

These are open-ended funds with a target maturity of 5 to 30 years.

They follow a glide path structure — equity exposure reduces as the maturity date approaches.

Rules include:

Maximum six life cycle funds per AMC

Maturity year must be part of the fund name (for example, Life Cycle Fund 2030)

Exit load: 3% in year one, 2% in year two, 1% in year three

Stricter Rules for Fund of Funds

Sebi has also standardized Fund of Funds (FoF) categories:

Domestic Equity FoF

Domestic Debt FoF

Hybrid FoF

Commodity FoF

Overseas FoF

Domestic + Overseas FoF

There will also be a limit on the number of FoFs each AMC can launch.

What This Means for Investors

These changes aim to make mutual funds:

Easier to understand

More transparent

Less overlapping

More aligned with investor expectations

For investors, it becomes simpler to compare funds and know exactly where their money is being invested.

In short, Sebi’s revamp is about bringing clarity and discipline to India’s mutual fund industry — and that could be a positive move for long-term investors.

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