What Exactly Is a SIF?
A Specialised Investment Fund, or SIF, is a new investment category created by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) through an amendment to the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996, effective December 16, 2024. SEBI followed this up with a detailed regulatory framework via a circular dated February 27, 2025, which came into force on April 1, 2025. In simple terms, a SIF sits between a traditional mutual fund and a Portfolio Management Service (PMS) โ built for investors who find regular mutual funds too restrictive but aren't ready to commit PMS-level capital. Only mutual fund houses (AMCs) that meet SEBI's eligibility criteria can launch a SIF, and every SIF must operate under its own distinct brand identity, separate from the parent mutual fund's name and logo.
Key Features That Set SIFs Apart
Strategy flexibility: SIFs can run long-short equity, sector rotation, and active asset allocation strategies โ techniques not permitted in regular mutual fund categories.
Derivative use: Fund managers can take unhedged short positions of up to 25% of a strategy's net assets.
Manager qualification: Every SIF fund manager must hold the relevant NISM certification.
Transparency: Monthly portfolio disclosures, mandatory benchmarking, and a standardised risk-band classification are required for every strategy.
Distinct branding: A SIF must use its own brand and logo, separate from the parent AMC's regular mutual fund identity.
Who Should Consider a SIF, and Why
SIFs are aimed at investors who already understand market risk and want exposure to more sophisticated strategies without a full PMS relationship. Because SIFs remain under the mutual fund regulatory umbrella, they carry a level of oversight and disclosure that unregistered or informally managed strategies don't offer โ one of SEBI's stated reasons for creating the category was to give such investors a supervised alternative to unregulated products.
The Restrictions Every Investor Should Know
Restriction | Detail |
|---|---|
Minimum investment | โน10 lakh per investor, at the PAN level, across all strategies under one SIF |
Accredited investor exemption | Minimum investment does not apply to accredited investors |
Single-issuer debt limit | Max 20% NAV in AAA-rated paper; 16% in AA-rated; 12% in A-rated and below |
Sector concentration limit | Max 25% NAV in debt instruments of a single sector |
Strategies per category | Only one strategy per approved category, per AMC |
Understanding these boundaries is the first step before evaluating any specific SIF strategy, which we build on in the articles that follow.