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Housing fin companies fall after Sebi tightens MF norms

The Sebi board on Monday approved amendment in the Mutual Funds Regulations, 1996, which will reduce sector exposure limits of debt schemes to 25 per cent from the current 30 per cent

Housing fin companies fall after Sebi tightens MF norms

Press Trust Of India Mumbai
Shares of housing finance companies saw some selling pressure and settled in the negative territory after the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) slashed mutual funds (MF) investment limits in debt securities of housing finance companies.

The Sebi board on Monday approved amendment in the Mutual Funds Regulations, 1996, which will reduce sector exposure limits of debt schemes to 25 per cent from the current 30 per cent. In the case of housing finance companies, the cap is an additional 10 per cent. Now, the regulator has decided to slash this to five per cent.

Following this, shares of housing companies like HDFC, Dewan Housing, LIC Housing, GIC Housing and Can Fin Homes came under selling pressure.
 

At the end of Tuesday's trading session, the stock of HDFC quoted at Rs 1,154.10, down 0.74 per cent, while Dewan Housing and LIC Housing fell 3.22 per cent and 1.89 per cent, respectively.

Meanwhile, shares of GIC Housing settled the day at Rs 229, down 3.31 per cent, and Can Fin Homes was at Rs 1,003, down 3.24 per cent, on the BSE.

Marketmen said this move by the regulator is likely to impact housing finance companies, as most of them depend heavily on bond markets to raise funds.

In a regulatory filing, HDFC on Tuesday said that according to Sebi's data on deployment of debt funds monthly report for December 2015, the total debt assets under management of MFs stood at Rs 8,80,672 crore.

The exposure of MFs to non-bank financial companies (NBFCs) is Rs 1,31,391 crore, which constitutes 14.9 per cent of the assets under management (AUM), it added.

HDFC further said the single sector exposure limit stipulated by Sebi for MFs is 30 per cent of the net asset value of a scheme for NBFCs (inclusive of 5 per cent for housing finance companies).

As of December 31, 2015, the total amount invested by MFs in non-convertible debentures and commercial paper issued by HDFC is 3.9 percent of the total debt AUM.

The single issuer limit stipulated by Sebi for mutual funds is 10 per cent of the net asset value of a scheme, the filing added.

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First Published: Jan 12 2016 | 10:41 PM IST

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