City
Epaper

RBI's mutual fund support plan may struggle to be effective: Fitch

By ANI | Updated: April 29, 2020 16:50 IST

The official support measures announced for mutual funds in India may struggle to be effective as under-capitalised banks are unlikely to be tempted to extend liquidity to the sector without capital relief on the facilities, according to Fitch Ratings.If the SLF-MF does not achieve its aims of supporting liquidity or restoring market confidence, Fitch believes more fund gatings could occur.

Open in App

The official support measures announced for mutual funds in India may struggle to be effective as under-capitalised banks are unlikely to be tempted to extend liquidity to the sector without capital relief on the facilities, according to Fitch Ratings.

The announcement follows the implementation of support facilities in multiple jurisdictions in 2020 to date, highlighting global regulators' focus on providing liquidity support to financial markets during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Reserve Bank of India's (RBI's) Rs 50,000 crore Special Liquidity Facility for Mutual Funds (SLF-MF) will provide 90-day repo funding to banks, to extend liquidity to -- or purchase commercial paper and debt securities from -- local mutual funds.

This followed the suspension of redemptions in six Franklin Templeton bond funds with combined assets under management (AUM) 4.1 billion dollars equivalent on April 23 and outflows from other funds last month. The scheme will be available from April 27 to May 11 or until its funding is exhausted.

"The success of the SLF-MF will hang on banks' appetite to take up the risks involved against the system-wide backdrop of low capital headroom and a likely increase in fresh non-performing loans," said Elaine Koh, Fitch Director for Non-Bank Financial Institutions.

The facility's structure places the onus on banks to absorb the associated credit and capital risk which may hinder their willingness to participate.

If the SLF-MF does not achieve its aims of supporting liquidity or restoring market confidence, Fitch believes more fund gatings could occur. Indian open-end mutual funds saw aggregate outflows of almost 20 per cent in March.

Within this, overnight funds -- the most conservative variant in India -- saw assets jump by almost 50 per cent whereas most other fund types saw outflows.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: Elaine kohReserve Bank Of IndiaFitch RatingsThe finance ministry of indiaMonetary policy committee of the rbi
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalRBI Repo Rate: What is This ‘Repo Rate’ Everyone’s Talking About? And Why Does Your EMI Go Up Because of It?

LifestyleBank Holidays in August 2025: Banks to Remain Closed For 8 Days This Month; Check Dates

MaharashtraMaharashtra: RBI Imposes Rs 6 Lakh Penalty on Motiram Agrawal Jalna Merchants Cooperative (MAJMC) Bank

NationalRBI Appoints Kesavan Ramachandran as Executive Director

NationalNew Co-Operative Bank Scam: RBI Allows Depositors To Withdraw Rs. 25,000 From This Date

Business Realted Stories

BusinessMyntra sees 20 pc growth in handloom demand, boosts role as platform for India’s artisan, textile heritage

BusinessTime to push transformative reforms and unlock India's full potential:FICCI President over US tariffs

BusinessJio files over four patents a day in FY25, doubles its patents tally in a single year as Reliance's deep tech efforts take wings

BusinessVacancy levels at historic lows, expected to decline further by 2026

BusinessMapMyIndia’s Q1 profit falls 6.5 pc sequentially, revenue slips