Sebi propone ampliar los préstamos intradía para fondos de inversión

La Junta de Bolsa y Valores de la India (Sebi) está considerando un uso más amplio de los préstamos intradía por parte de los fondos de inversión para mejorar la gestión de efectivo. La medida iría más allá de los límites actuales vinculados a los pagos por reembolso y busca resolver los desfases temporales entre las salidas de capital y los fondos entrantes.

Sebi propone cambios que permitirían a los fondos de inversión utilizar los préstamos intradía como una herramienta general de gestión de efectivo. Actualmente, dichos préstamos están restringidos a cubrir pagos por reembolso. El regulador pretende otorgar a los gestores de fondos una mayor flexibilidad y, al mismo tiempo, mejorar los rendimientos generales mediante un mejor manejo de las necesidades de liquidez.

Artículos relacionados

Illustration depicting Indian corporate executives preferring bank loans over bonds in a Mumbai office amid rising yields.
Imagen generada por IA

Corporate borrowers favor bank loans over bonds amid rising yields

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Corporate borrowers in India are increasingly opting for bank loans instead of bond issuances. Rising capital market yields have eroded the cost advantage of bonds. Spreads between bank lending rates and bond yields have compressed significantly, especially for higher-rated entities.

India's market regulator is proposing changes to speed up fundraising for alternative investment funds. A new green channel would allow certain schemes to launch immediately while waiting periods for regular schemes would be reduced.

Reportado por IA

India's markets regulator Sebi has proposed relaxing securitisation norms to match Reserve Bank of India regulations. The changes include easing the 25% single borrower exposure cap and shifting disclosure duties to servicers.

India's banking system liquidity surplus has narrowed to ₹75,483 crore amid advance tax outflows of Rs 2 lakh crore and forex market interventions. Money market rates rose as a result, leading the Reserve Bank of India to conduct a repo operation. Economists estimate the RBI sold over $15 billion to support the rupee.

Reportado por IA

Retail investors put ₹38,440 crore into equity mutual funds last month, a modest decline from March levels. The dip occurred amid uncertainty over oil prices and lower SIP collections.

India's Reserve Bank of India has declined a request from banks to spread out provisions for expected mark-to-market losses in the March quarter. Banks sought this relief to mitigate pressures from rising government bond yields and a $100 million cap on net open positions. The decision adds to uncertainty in financial markets.

Reportado por IA

Seven mutual fund NFOs and three SIFs are currently available for investors to subscribe. The offerings include a mix of ETFs, index funds and one contra fund along with specialized long-short strategies.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar