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RBI U turns on AIF investing by banks and NBFCs with a sharp 10% cap

Economy
Published on 24 April 2026
RBI U turns on AIF investing by banks and NBFCs with a sharp 10% cap

One investor can now fund at most 10% of an AIF

The RBI has proposed curbs on banks and NBFCs investing in Alternative Investment Funds, capping any single regulated entity’s contribution to 10% of a scheme’s total corpus. The move tightens concentration risk and changes how financial firms allocate money into AIFs, with potential ripple effects for funding strategies and investment flows.

  • RBI proposes a 10% cap for any single regulated entity in an AIF
  • The cap applies to banks and NBFCs investing in AIF schemes
  • Aim is to reduce concentration and related risk in AIF holdings
  • New rules could reshape how firms choose and size AIF investments
Read the full story at The Economic Times

This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on The Economic TimesThe Economic Times

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