Consent of unit holders will be needed before winding up a mutual fund schemeMumbai: Aiming to protect interests of mutual funds investors, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Tuesday cleared the move to allow trustees of funds to obtain the consent of unitholders if the majority of trustees decide to wind up a scheme.As part of amending the mutual fund regulations, the market regulator will make it mandatory for the funds to follow Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS) from 2023-24 onwards. The decision was taken in SEBI’s board meeting.Mutual fund trustees will need to seek the consent of unitholders when the majority of trustees decide to wind up a scheme or prematurely redeem the units of a close-ended scheme, a statement issued by SEBI said.”The trustees will have to obtain consent of the unitholders by simple majority of the unitholders present and voting on the basis of one vote per unit held and publish the results of voting within 45 days of the publication of notice of circumstances leading to winding up,” it said.If trustees fail to obtain the consent, then the scheme should be open for business activities from the second business day after publication of results of voting, SEBI said further.Apart from the Ind AS requirements, the regulator has decided to amend the norms with respect to accounting-related regulatory provisions to remove redundant provisions and to bring more clarity.Meanwhile, to enhance the role of KYC Registration Agencies (KRAs), the regulator has decided to make them responsible to carry out independent validation of the KYC records uploaded onto their system by the Registered Intermediary (RI).Besides, such agencies will have to maintain an audit trail of the upload/modification/download with respect to KYC records of clients.”It has also been prescribed that the systems of the RIs and KRAs should be integrated to facilitate seamless movement of KYC documents to and from RIs to KRAs,” the statement said.
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