Markets regulator SEBI has prohibited mutual funds from participating in pre-IPO share placements, directing them instead toward anchor investor rounds. The move aims to boost liquidity, enhance transparency in IPO valuations, and broaden participation by domestic institutional investors, with mutual funds now reserved a larger share in anchor allocations.
Regulatory clarity and investor impact
On November 21, 2025, SEBI announced that mutual fund schemes will no longer be allowed to invest in pre-IPO placements. Instead, they can participate in anchor rounds, which precede IPOs and provide stability to public offerings. The regulator has also expanded the anchor investor quota to 40 percent, with 33 percent earmarked for mutual funds and 7 percent for insurers and pension funds. This change is designed to ensure fairer valuations, reduce opacity in pre-IPO deals, and strengthen retail investor confidence. Industry experts note that while family offices and alternative investment funds may continue pre-IPO participation, mutual funds will now play a more structured role in IPO anchor investments.
Notable updates
• SEBI prohibits mutual funds from investing in pre-IPO placements
• Mutual funds allowed to invest in IPO anchor rounds instead
• Anchor investor quota raised to 40 percent (33 percent for mutual funds, 7 percent for insurers/pension funds)
• Aim: improve liquidity, transparency, and valuation fairness in IPOs
• Family offices and AIFs may still access pre-IPO deals
Major takeaway
SEBI’s move reshapes IPO participation by mutual funds, aligning them with anchor investments to strengthen transparency and investor trust in India’s capital markets.
Sources: CNBC-TV18, Hindu Business Line, NDTV Profit, Economic Times