India’s investment landscape has quietly but meaningfully evolved.
For decades, investors broadly operated within two familiar frameworks. On one side were traditional mutual funds, simple, diversified and designed for mass participation. On the other hand, Portfolio Management Services and Alternative Investment Funds offered flexibility and customisation but required high minimum investments and a greater tolerance for complexity.
Between these two ends of the spectrum sat a large and growing group of informed investors. They sought deeper strategies, better diversification, and a more sophisticated approach to risk, yet wanted to remain within a transparent and well-regulated framework.
Recognising this unmet need, SEBI has introduced Specialised Investment Funds (SIFs). This marks a new investment opportunity for informed Indian investors who wish to move beyond conventional mutual fund categories, without stepping fully into the concentrated, discretionary nature of PMS or the scale and complexity of AIFs.
A Specialised Investment Fund is a pooled investment vehicle launched under SEBI’s mutual fund regulations, but designed with a clear strategic focus rather than standard retail categories.
SIFs are intended for informed investors and therefore require a minimum investment of ₹10 lakh per investor. This threshold ensures that participation is limited to investors who understand market behaviour, strategy-driven investing and the need for patience across cycles.
Unlike traditional mutual funds, SIFs are:
SIFs can deploy advanced approaches such as long-short equity, market-neutral, or tactical strategies, subject to SEBI-defined limits. At the same time, they continue to follow mutual fund-style governance, valuation norms, and disclosure requirements.
In effect, SIFs allow institutional-style strategies to be implemented within a familiar, disciplined regulatory structure.
SEBI’s rationale for introducing SIFs was both practical and forward-looking.
SIFs were introduced to fill the space between these options. By setting a minimum investment of ₹10 lakh per investor, SEBI has clearly positioned SIFs as a product for serious, informed investors, while keeping the entry barrier meaningfully lower than for PMS or AIF structures.
This is not a replacement for existing investment avenues. It is a thoughtful addition to the ecosystem.
SEBI has placed strict eligibility conditions to ensure that SIFs are launched only by capable institutions.
To qualify, an asset management company must:
Newer AMCs must appoint experienced leadership, including a seasoned Chief Investment Officer and fund managers with a proven track record of managing sizable portfolios.
These requirements ensure that SIFs are backed by institutional depth and experience, rather than experimentation.
Mutual Funds
Designed for broad participation, diversified, largely long-only and suitable for retail investors.
Portfolio Management Services
Discretionary or advisory portfolios with higher concentration, manager-driven decision making and portfolio-specific execution, typically requiring higher minimum investments.
Specialised Investment Funds
Strategy-specific pooled funds with a minimum investment of ₹10 lakh per investor, offering advanced strategies within a regulated mutual fund framework and standardised disclosures.
Alternative Investment Funds
Privately placed vehicles with very high minimum investments, broad freedom in instruments and structures, and higher complexity, suited primarily for ultra-high net worth investors and institutions.
Seen this way, SIFs clearly occupy the middle ground, combining strategic sophistication with regulatory comfort.
SIFs are not designed to chase higher returns by taking outsized risks. Their real value lies in how they allow portfolios to behave differently across market conditions.
For the right investor, SIFs can offer:
They can complement existing investments rather than replace them, especially in mature portfolios.
SIFs are suitable for investors who:
They are not meant for frequent entry and exit. Alignment with the strategy and patience through market cycles are essential.
At Fine Advice, we believe wealth creation evolves in stages.
Different structures serve different purposes at various points in an investor’s journey. Mutual funds, PMSs, SIFs, and AIFs each play a role. The opportunity lies in choosing the structure that best aligns with an investor’s objectives, temperament, and financial maturity.
Specialised Investment Funds represent a new and meaningful opportunity for informed investors who are ready to move beyond traditional categories, while still valuing transparency, regulation and discipline.
As always, successful investing is not about accessing every new option. It is about choosing the right one, at the right time, for the right reason.
Investments in Specialised Investment Funds involve relatively higher risk, including potential loss of capital, liquidity risk and market volatility. Please read all scheme-related documents carefully before investing. This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.