Mr. U. K. Sinha |
SEBI chairman Mr. U. K. Sinha said,''Now mutual funds can float a 'Infrastructure Debt Fund' as a close-ended scheme maturing after five years or an interval scheme with lock-in of five years, The IDF would invest 90 per cent of its assets in the debt securities of infrastructure companies. The minimum investment into IDF would be Rs 1 crore and the minimum size of the unit would be 1 million. An Infrastructure debt fund shall have minimum five investors and no single investor shall hold more than 50 per cent of net assets of the scheme,"'
The IDF, which was proposed by finance minister Pranab Mukherjee in the Union Budget for FY12, is aimed at accelerating and enhancing flow of long-term debt for funding the ambitious programme of infrastructure development in the country.
The requirement of infrastructure in the 12th Plan has been pegged at $1 trillion.
As per the government norms an IDF may be set up either as a trust or company. While the trust based IDF (Mutual Fund) would be regulated by Sebi, an IDF set up as a company (NBFC) would be regulated by the RBI.
While coming out with the guidelines for IDFs floated by MFs, Sebi said, the strategic investor would have to make a firm commitment of Rs 25 crore. The units of infrastructure debt fund schemes shall be listed on the BSE and NSE stock exchanges.
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