The Base Expense Ratio (BER) has been introduced, which excludes GST, Securities Transaction Tax (STT), and other statutory levies, allowing investors to understand operational costs separately from taxes. The traditional Total Expense Ratio (TER) will now be the sum of BER + brokerage + regulatory levies + statutory levies, enhancing mutual fund fee transparency.
SEBI also revised brokerage caps. For equity cash market trades, the cap is set at 6 basis points (bps), up from the initially proposed 2 bps but down from the prior 12 bps. For derivative trades, the cap is 2 bps, reduced from 5 bps. These adjustments aim to balance cost efficiency and manager flexibility in executing trades.
Additionally, SEBI removed a 5-bps exit load fee, effective April 1, 2026, making redemptions more investor-friendly and improving liquidity. These moves are expected to reduce average mutual fund charges by 10–15 bps, benefiting retail and institutional investors alike.
Other Regulatory Reforms
Alongside the fee revamp, SEBI approved multiple reforms to modernize India’s capital markets:
- Stockbroking updates: Over 30-year-old regulations for brokers were revised for clarity and transparency, impacting firms like Angel One and Nuvama.
- IPO disclosures: A concise summary of key information replaces the abridged prospectus, aiding investor understanding.
- Pre-IPO lock-in rules: Lock-ins now continue even if pledged shares are released, streamlining issuer operations.
- Debt market incentives: Special provisions introduced for retail investors, women, and senior citizens.
- Credit ratings for unlisted debt: Agencies can rate unlisted securities with proper risk management.
However, the conflict of interest framework for senior SEBI officials was deferred for further deliberation, reflecting operational complexities.
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