The Gap That Nobody Was Filling
India’s investment landscape has always had a peculiar gap in the middle. On one side, you had mutual funds — accessible, regulated, and familiar, but limited in the strategies they could deploy. On the other side, PMS required a minimum of ₹50 lakhs, and Alternative Investment Funds demanded at least ₹1 crore before you could even have a conversation. For investors who had outgrown standard mutual funds but were not quite at the ticket size required for PMS or AIF, there was genuinely nowhere useful to go. A SIF fund — Specialised Investment Fund — is the regulatory answer to that problem, and it became effective from April 1, 2025.
What Makes a SIF Fund Different From Everything Else
The honest answer is flexibility — but a specific kind of flexibility that matters. Traditional mutual funds operate within strict strategy boundaries. Fund managers cannot take meaningful short positions, cannot use derivatives aggressively, and cannot implement strategies like long-short equity that institutional investors have used for decades to manage risk and generate returns in varied market conditions. A SIF fund changes this. Fund managers operating within the SIF framework have access to tools that allow up to 25% naked short exposure through derivative instruments. They can deploy strategies that simply do not exist within the conventional mutual fund structure. And they do all of this within a SEBI-regulated framework, which means investor protection does not get sacrificed for the sake of flexibility.
Who This Is Actually Built For
The minimum investment for a SIF fund is ₹10 lakhs — significantly lower than PMS or AIF thresholds, but still above the entry point of a standard mutual fund SIP. This positioning is deliberate. SIFs are designed for high-risk appetite investors, HNIs, family offices, and institutions who want access to differentiated strategies without the capital barrier that PMS and AIF typically impose. For accredited investors, the minimum drops further to ₹1 lakh. The tax treatment mirrors that of mutual funds, which removes one complication that often surrounds alternative investment structures. It is worth noting that this is not a product for every investor — the risk-reward profile is meaningfully different from a conventional balanced fund, and suitability assessment matters.
Getting Started Without Getting Lost in the Process
One thing that puts investors off exploring newer products is the fear that the onboarding process will be opaque and drawn out. With the right intermediary, that concern largely disappears. Anand Rathi share and stocks broker supports investors through the entire SIF process — from initial enquiry and eligibility assessment, through KYC completion and strategy selection, to post-investment reporting and portfolio monitoring. The process is structured to make sure investors understand what they are entering before they commit capital, not after.
The Demat Account Question That Often Gets Overlooked
Before exploring any investment product — including a SIF fund — having a properly set-up demat account is the foundational requirement. Many investors assume this step is complicated or expensive. It does not have to be either. A free demat account can be opened quickly through a digital process, and once active, it becomes the infrastructure through which your holdings across equities, funds, and structured products are all held and tracked. Getting this in place is not a formality to rush through — it is genuinely the starting point for any serious investment activity, including newer asset classes like SIFs that reward investors who approach them with the right infrastructure and the right questions already answered.