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    Home»Mutual Funds»SEBI board to consider comprehensive review of mutual funds, stock brokers rules on Dec 17
    Mutual Funds

    SEBI board to consider comprehensive review of mutual funds, stock brokers rules on Dec 17

    November 21, 2025


    Image used for representational purposes only. File

    Image used for representational purposes only. File
    | Photo Credit: Reuters

    SEBI plans to undertake a comprehensive review of its mutual fund and stock broker regulations at its board meeting next month, as the markets regulator seeks to make these frameworks more relevant and efficient, a senior official said on Friday (November 21, 2025).

    The issues will be taken up at the board meeting scheduled for December 17, the official added.

    The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has already released consultation papers on both sets of regulations.

    In October, the regulator issued a consultation paper proposing an overhaul of mutual fund rules, including a clearer definition of the Total Expense Ratio (TER) and revised limits on brokerage charges. These recommendations are aimed at enhancing transparency, rationalising information, reducing redundancies, and easing compliance, the official noted.

    As part of the proposed framework, SEBI plans to remove the additional 5 basis points (BPs) that asset management companies (AMCs) were previously allowed to levy across mutual fund schemes.

    This additional expense, introduced to offset the impact of crediting exit loads back to schemes, was first set at 20 BPs in 2012 and later reduced to 5 BPs in 2018. The additional expense of 5 BPs that mutual fund schemes were allowed to charge was transitory in nature.

    To further improve clarity, SEBI also suggested excluding all statutory levies such as STT, GST, CTT and stamp duty from TER limits, along with currently permissible expenses for brokerage, exchange, and regulatory fees.

    At present, GST on management fees is allowed over and above the TER limit, while other statutory charges fall within the prescribed cap for mutual fund schemes.

    The regulator recently extended the deadline for public comments on the proposal to November 24 from November 17 earlier.

    In addition to mutual fund rules, the board will also take up the proposal to review the 1992 Stock Broker Regulations. As part of this revamp, SEBI proposed introducing a definition for ‘algorithmic trading’ to streamline compliance requirements, as the current framework lacks any such clarity.

    “Regulations for stock brokers were framed 30 years ago and SEBI is looking to update them,” the official said.

    The December 17 meeting will also consider the report of a high-level panel that examined conflict-of-interest safeguards within the organisation. Last week, the regulator indicated that the panel’s recommendations would be presented to the board.

    In its report, the panel proposed wide-ranging reforms to strengthen transparency, including enhanced disclosures and a “zero-tolerance” approach to conflicts of interest among senior officials.

    The high-level panel submitted its report to Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey on November 10. The report also recommended setting up a secure and anonymous whistleblower system for reporting conflicts of interest, a ban on expensive gifts, a two-year restriction on post-retirement assignments, and creating a post of Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer (CECO).

    Published – November 21, 2025 10:23 pm IST



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