EPFO to enter Dalal Street in July

Plans to invest Rs 5,000 crore in exchange traded funds

Update: 2015-06-26 00:47 GMT
EPFO will start investing in stock markets from next month as part of its plan to put in as much as Rs 5,000 crore in exchange traded funds

New Delhi: Retirement fund body EPFO will start investing in stock markets from next month as part of its plan to put in as much as Rs 5,000 crore in exchange traded funds (ETFs) by the end of this fiscal. “We will start investing in the exchange trade funds from next month. We have planned to invest 5 per cent of our incremental deposits in ETFs during this fiscal,” Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation’s Central Provident Fund commissioner K. K. Jalan said.

“EPFO is expected to get about Rs1 lakh crore as incremental deposit during the current financial year. Thus, we would be able to invest Rs 5,000 crore in ETFs during this fiscal,” he added. A decision regarding investment in stock markets was taken at the meeting of Central Board of Trustees (CBT), the apex decision-making body of EPFO on March 31. The labour ministry had given EPFO a direction through a notification on April 23 for investment of five per cent of its corpus into ETFs.

Earlier, the EPFO, which has over six crore subscribers, has been investing primarily in state and central government securities. Unionists had opposed any investment in equity or equity-related instruments during the meeting of the CBT on March 31. The new investment pattern notified on April 23 by the labour ministry states that EPFO will invest a minimum of 5 per cent and up to 15 per cent of incremental deposits in equity or equity-related schemes.

However, the EPFO has decided to park 5 per cent of its incremental deposits in the ETFs to start with during this fiscal. The new investment pattern for EPFO provides that the body will invest in “shares of body corporates listed on Bombay Stock Exchange or the National Stock Exchange, which have market capitalisation of not less than Rs 5,000 crore as on the date of investment”.

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