| Feature | Mutual Fund | SIF (Specialised Investment Fund) | PMS | AIF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum investment | As low as ₹100-₹500 | ₹10 lakh per PAN across all SIF strategies of one fund house | ₹50 lakh | ₹1 crore |
| Regulated under | SEBI Mutual Fund Regulations | SEBI Mutual Fund Regulations, SIF chapter (circular 27 Feb 2025) | SEBI Portfolio Managers Regulations | SEBI AIF Regulations |
| Flexibility | Limited; mostly long-only, derivatives only for hedging | Moderate; long-short and unhedged derivative exposure up to 25 percent of net assets | High; discretionary, concentrated portfolios | Very high; private equity, structured, hedge-style |
| Structure | Pooled units, daily NAV | Pooled units, NAV based, frequency set per strategy | Individual demat holding in your name | Pooled fund, units |
| Who it suits | First-time and mass retail investors | Experienced investors and HNIs wanting more than a plain fund | HNIs wanting a tailored equity portfolio | Wealthy and institutional investors |
The Specialised Investment Fund, or SIF, is a new investment product that the Securities and Exchange Board of India created through a circular dated 27 February 2025, effective from 1 April 2025, to fill the gap between an ordinary mutual fund and the far costlier Portfolio Management Service. It carries a minimum investment of ₹10 lakh per investor and allows strategies, such as long-short positions, that plain mutual funds cannot run.
For years there was a wide gap in India's investment ladder. Mutual funds were open to anyone with a few hundred rupees but were tightly restricted in what they could do. The next rung up, PMS, demanded ₹50 lakh, and an Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) needed ₹1 crore. Investors who wanted more sophisticated, hedged or long-short strategies but did not have ₹50 lakh to ₹1 crore had nowhere regulated to go. Some drifted into unregulated or mis-sold products.
SEBI's 27 February 2025 circular (reference SEBI/HO/IMD/IMD-PoD-1/P/CIR/2025/26) introduced the SIF as a distinct, branded product offered by existing mutual fund houses. A follow-up circular in April 2025 standardised the application and the Investment Strategy Information Document formats. The aim was to give serious investors a regulated middle path with clear disclosure, defined risk limits and the trust of the SEBI mutual fund framework.
The headline condition is the minimum ticket size. An investor must keep an aggregate of at least ₹10 lakh across all SIF strategies offered by a single fund house, measured at the PAN level. A few clarifications that matter in practice:
Not every fund house can launch a SIF. Under the framework an AMC qualifies through one of two routes. The first is a track record route: at least 3 years in operation with an average assets under management of not less than ₹10,000 crore over the preceding three years. The second is an alternative route for newer or smaller houses, which requires appointing an experienced Chief Investment Officer (broadly 10 years of fund management and large AUM managed) plus an additional fund manager meeting defined experience norms. Confirm the exact appointee criteria from the SEBI circular before relying on them.
This is what makes a SIF different from the fund you already own. SEBI has permitted three broad families of SIF strategy:
The defining freedom is the ability to take short exposure. A SIF strategy can take exposure of up to 25 percent of its net assets in exchange-traded derivative instruments for purposes other than hedging and rebalancing. In plain language, the manager can bet that some securities will fall, not only that they will rise. A plain mutual fund cannot do this; it may use derivatives essentially only to hedge. This long-short ability can, in theory, smooth returns when markets fall, but it also adds a layer of risk and complexity that a buy-and-hold equity fund does not carry. Short positions can lose money if the market moves the other way.
Compared with a mutual fund, a SIF has a far higher entry ticket (₹10 lakh against a few hundred rupees), more strategy freedom, and a separate Investment Strategy Information Document. It is meant for investors who understand and accept derivative and long-short risk.
Compared with PMS, a SIF is cheaper to enter (₹10 lakh against ₹50 lakh) and simpler. In PMS the securities are held in a demat account in your own name and the portfolio is tailored to you. A SIF is a pooled product: you hold units and a NAV is struck, exactly like a mutual fund, with subscription and redemption frequencies defined for each strategy. So a SIF gives you pooled convenience with more freedom than a fund, while PMS gives you individual ownership at a much higher price.
A SIF will carry an expense ratio and may have exit loads or defined redemption windows depending on the strategy. Read the Investment Strategy Information Document for the exact cost structure before investing.
On taxation, a SIF is taxed broadly like the underlying mutual fund category it resembles, so an equity-oriented strategy is generally treated differently from a debt-oriented one. The rules and holding-period thresholds change with each Budget, so do not assume a fixed rate. To understand how capital gains on equity-type holdings are computed, see our guide to long-term capital gains tax on equity shares and mutual funds under Section 112A, and confirm the current-year position with your tax adviser. This article does not give tax or investment advice and does not promise returns.
A SIF is not a safer or guaranteed version of a mutual fund. The same long-short and derivative tools that can cushion a fall can also amplify a loss if the manager's view is wrong. Suitability depends on your goals, time horizon and ability to absorb volatility. It is built for investors who already understand market risk, can lock in a sizeable sum, and want a regulated product more flexible than a plain fund but lighter than PMS. A first-time investor with ₹10 lakh of life savings is usually better served by a diversified mutual fund. If you ever feel a SIF was mis-sold, you can raise it with the right authority; our guide to which regulator to complain to, SEBI, RBI, IRDAI and others explains the routes. For broader financial literacy, The RTI Playbook is a useful companion.
It is a regulated investment product introduced by SEBI via a circular dated 27 February 2025, effective 1 April 2025, sitting between mutual funds and PMS. It is offered by eligible mutual fund houses and allows strategies, such as long-short, that plain funds cannot run.
₹10 lakh per investor, measured as an aggregate across all SIF strategies of a single fund house at PAN level. Accredited investors are exempt from this floor.
PMS requires ₹50 lakh and holds securities in your own name; an AIF requires ₹1 crore. A SIF needs only ₹10 lakh and is a pooled, NAV-based product, so it is cheaper and simpler to enter while still allowing more flexible strategies than a mutual fund.
Yes. A SIF strategy can take exposure of up to 25 percent of its net assets through exchange-traded derivatives for purposes other than hedging and rebalancing, which lets the manager run long-short strategies. This adds both opportunity and risk.
No. It is not inherently safer. The added flexibility brings added risk. Suitability depends on your goals, horizon and risk tolerance, and you should read the Investment Strategy Information Document before investing.
SEBI regulates SIFs, so a mis-selling or grievance complaint goes through SEBI's investor grievance channel, including the SCORES platform. If you need to seek information from a public authority on a related matter, you can use the AI RTI draft tool, and the RTI Act sets out your right to information from public bodies.