Central bank's move seen as confidence booster for investors, experts say, as redemptions rose after Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund closed six debt mutual funds last week
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in an emergency move on Monday, announced a Rs 50,000 crore (approximately $6.5 billion) special liquidity facility for the mutual fund industry as redemptions rose after Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund closed six debt mutual funds last week.
Under the new move, the RBI will conduct repo operations of 90 days tenor at the fixed repo rate. The scheme is available from April 27 till May 11 or up to utilisation of the allocated amount, whichever is earlier.
“Heightened volatility in [the] capital markets in reaction to Covid-19 has imposed liquidity strains on mutual funds which have intensified in the wake of redemption pressures related to closure of some debt MFs and potential contagious effects therefrom,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said in a statement issued to the bank’s website.
Das clarified the stress is confined to the high-risk debt mutual fund segment at this stage. “The larger industry remains liquid.” he added.
Last week, Franklin Templeton MF decided to wind up $4.1 billion of Indian debt funds–the largest-ever forced closure of funds in the country–citing severe market dislocation and illiquidity in the bond market caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. The six schemes wound up are the Franklin Low Duration, Franklin Dynamic Accrual, Franklin Credit Risk Fund, Franklin Short Term Income, Franklin Ultra Short Bond and Franklin Income Opportunities Fund.
This means that investors can no longer buy or sell in any of these schemes and their systematic investment plans and withdrawal plans stand cancelled. Investors are expected to recover their money invested, based on how the mutual fund house liquidates its portfolio and on the maturity of these schemes. Thus, it could be anywhere from 6 to 18 months, experts have said, declining to be named.