Harun Raaj & AssociatesHarun Raaj & Associates
sebi

SEBI Clarifies Intraday Borrowing by Mutual Funds: What It Means

SEBI has issued a clarification on the intraday borrowing facility available to mutual funds, addressing the operational framework for managing liquidity mismatches within the trading day. This update matters to fund houses, asset managers, and investors tracking mutual fund risk management.

CH

CA Harun Raaj

Chartered Accountant · Harun Raaj & Associates

SEBI Steps in on Intraday Borrowing by Mutual Funds

[SEBI](https://www.harunraaj.com/services/aif-registration-sebi) has released a circular clarifying the intraday borrowing facility that mutual funds can avail of. The circular addresses how mutual fund schemes may use short-term borrowing to manage temporary liquidity mismatches during the trading day — a mechanism that, while routine, carries real implications for fund [risk](https://www.harunraaj.com/services/fraud-risk-assessment) management, [investor](https://www.harunraaj.com/services/shareholders-agreement) [protection](https://www.harunraaj.com/services/insurance-analysis), and regulatory [compliance](https://www.harunraaj.com/services/whistleblower-investigation).

This is a clarification-type circular, which means SEBI is not creating a new rule from scratch. Instead, it is refining the existing framework under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations and the broader SEBI Liquidity Management Rules to ensure asset management companies (AMCs) operate with adequate guardrails.

Why Does Intraday Borrowing Matter?

Mutual fund schemes handle large volumes of redemptions and subscriptions every day. On certain days — particularly around month-ends, NAV adjustment dates, or during market stress — the timing mismatch between cash inflows and outflows can be significant. An intraday borrowing facility allows a scheme to bridge that gap temporarily, rather than being forced into a distressed sale of portfolio securities.

However, borrowing by a mutual fund scheme is not free of risk. If not governed properly:

  • It can increase the leverage profile of the scheme.
  • It can expose unitholders to counterparty risk.
  • It can mask underlying liquidity stress if used habitually.

SEBI's clarification is aimed at ensuring that this tool is used for its intended purpose — temporary, intraday liquidity management — and not as a structural crutch.

What This Circular Likely Covers

The source material confirms that SEBI has issued guidance on the operational framework and permissible use of intraday borrowing. Based on the nature of the update, the circular is expected to address several areas:

  • Scope of borrowing — Which types of schemes can use intraday borrowing and under what conditions.
  • Permissible limits — The extent to which a scheme may borrow relative to its net assets during the trading day.
  • Eligible instruments and counterparties — Where the borrowed funds may come from and how the facility is structured.
  • Disclosure and reporting requirements — What AMCs must report to SEBI, trustees, and investors regarding the use of this facility.
  • Compliance and governance obligations — The role of the compliance officer, trustee oversight, and internal controls.

Important: The exact thresholds, revised limits, and detailed provisions are contained in the full circular. I strongly recommend that fund managers, compliance teams, and advisors refer to the official SEBI circular for the precise text: [SEBI Circular – Intraday Borrowing Facility Availed by Mutual Funds](https://www.sebi.gov.in/legal/circulars/jul-2026/intraday-borrowing-facility-availed-by-mutual-funds_102762.html).

Who Needs to Pay Attention?

  • Asset Management Companies (AMCs): This is directly applicable. Compliance checklists, internal policies, and board-level reporting frameworks may need to be updated.
  • Fund managers and dealing desks: The operational limits and eligible instruments will directly affect how intraday liquidity is managed.
  • Trustees of mutual fund trusts: Enhanced oversight responsibility may follow from this clarification.
  • Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) and portfolio managers: While the circular is addressed to mutual funds, the regulatory direction often signals the broader policy stance SEBI takes on leverage and borrowing across pooled vehicles. AIF managers should note this trend.
  • Investors in debt and liquid mutual fund schemes: These are the schemes most likely to use intraday borrowing. Greater regulatory clarity here is a positive signal for investor protection.

What Should AMCs and Fund Advisors Do Now?

  • Read the full circular carefully. Do not rely on summaries alone for compliance decisions.
  • Update internal compliance checklists to incorporate any revised borrowing limits, reporting timelines, or disclosure formats.
  • Review existing borrowing arrangements with banks and counterparties to ensure they align with the updated framework.
  • Brief the board and trustees on the clarification and its implications for scheme-level risk management.
  • Document the compliance response. SEBI inspections routinely check whether circulars have been acknowledged and operationalised within the AMC's compliance framework.

The Bigger Picture

SEBI has been steadily tightening the liquidity management framework for mutual funds since the credit events of 2019–2020. This clarification is part of that broader effort — ensuring that pooled investment vehicles manage their cash flows transparently and do not take on hidden leverage that investors are unaware of.

For investors, this is reassuring. For fund houses and their advisors, it is one more item on the compliance calendar that requires careful attention.

I'm CA Harun Raaj, Visakhapatnam. If you manage or advise a mutual fund, AIF, or pooled investment vehicle and need help reviewing your compliance framework against this updated SEBI guidance, reach out to Harun Raaj & Associates.

Topics:SEBI intraday borrowing mutual funds 2026mutual fund liquidity management SEBI circularSEBI mutual fund borrowing limitsintraday borrowing facility AMC complianceSEBI liquidity management rules mutual fundsmutual fund compliance update July 2026AIF advisory SEBI borrowing regulationSEBI circular mutual fund risk management

Need help with this?

Our team handles the paperwork. You focus on your business.