RBI and Sebi to come out with regulations in their respective domains.
The finance ministry has finalised the structure of the infrastructure debt funds (IDFs) proposed in the Budget.
The IDF may be set up either as a trust or as a company. A trust based IDF would normally be a mutual fund (MF) that would issue units while a company-based IDF would be a form of NBFC that would issue bonds.
The trust based IDF (MF) would be regulated by Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) and an IDF set up as a company (NBFC) would be regulated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
STRUCTURE OF IDF |
AS A TRUST |
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IDF AS A COMPANY |
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Both the regulators would come out with the regulations on setting up of the IDFs falling in their respective domains.
The investors in the IDFs would primarily be domestic and off-shore institutional investors, especially insurance and pension funds with long-term resources. Banks and FIs would only be allowed to invest as sponsors of an IDF.
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In case of an IDF that issues bonds, credit enhancement inherent in Public Private Partnership (PPP) projects would be available. Such IDFs would refinance PPP projects after their construction is completed and successfully operated for at least one year.
Such projects would involve a lower level of risk and consequently a higher credit rating. This structure would enable flow of insurance and pensions funds at competitive costs in order to channelise low-cost long-term debt in PPP projects in infrastructure sectors such as roads, ports, airports, railways and metro rail.
In case of IDFs that would issue units, greater credit risk would be borne by the investors who would be free to seek correspondingly higher returns. MFs would be especially useful for non-PPP projects.
Sebi has formulated a draft chapter that would be inserted in the existing mutual fund regulations for permitting setting up of IDFs on this route by registered MFs as a scheme.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, in his Budget speech for 2011-12, had announced setting up of infrastructure debt funds (IDFs) to accelerate and enhance the flow of long-term debt in infrastructure projects.
To attract off-shore funds into IDFs, the finance minister had also announced that withholding tax on interest payments on the borrowings by the IDFs would be reduced from 20 per cent to 5 per cent. Income of the IDFs has also been exempt from income tax.