Role of the AMC (Asset Management Company)
The Asset Management Company (AMC) is the entity appointed by the Trustee, with the approval of SEBI, to manage the mutual fund's investments. The AMC employs f...
Role of the AMC (Asset Management Company)
The Asset Management Company (AMC) is the entity appointed by the Trustee, with the approval of SEBI, to manage the mutual fund's investments. The AMC employs fund managers, research analysts, and operational staff to manage the portfolio according to each scheme's stated investment objective. The AMC must maintain a minimum net worth of ₹50 crore, have at least 50% independent directors on its board, and is restricted to portfolio management, advisory, and related financial services. The AMC earns revenue through management fees, which form part of the scheme's Total Expense Ratio (TER).
The AMC is the engine room of the mutual fund — this is where the action happens. Over the past two decades, AMCs have evolved from small, opaque organizations to sophisticated, technology-driven asset managers. India now has 44+ AMCs managing a combined AUM of over ₹82 lakh crore (as of February 2026), serving 27+ crore folios. The AMC is essentially the "hired professional manager." It does not own the fund's assets (those belong to the trust), it does not oversee itself (that is the trustee's job), and it did not set up the fund (that is the sponsor's role). The AMC's job is singular: manage the money well, within the rules, and earn a fee for doing so. The net worth requirement was increased from ₹10 crore to ₹50 crore — SEBI wants AMCs to have serious financial muscle, not just intellectual capacity. This increase filtered out weak players and raised the entry bar significantly. An important point often overlooked in standard training: the AMC can only engage in portfolio management and advisory services. It cannot run a restaurant, build real estate, or start a tech company on the side. This restriction exists because SEBI does not want AMC management distracted from their primary job — managing investor money. The 50% independent director requirement on the AMC board adds another governance layer. These independent directors are expected to challenge the management, question risk-taking decisions, and represent the interests of unitholders in the boardroom.
A Practical Example
Consider a comparison of two AMCs to see how this works in practice. ICICI Prudential AMC has a net worth well above the ₹50 crore minimum — they manage over ₹9 lakh crore in AUM (as of early 2026). They employ some of India's most experienced fund managers, including individuals with 20+ years of market experience. Their research team covers hundreds of companies across sectors. The AMC charges a management fee that forms part of the TER — for example, an ICICI Prudential equity fund might charge a TER of 1.5-1.8% for the regular plan, of which the AMC's management fee might be around 0.8-1.0%. Now consider a smaller AMC like PPFAS Mutual Fund (Parag Parikh). Despite being much smaller (around ₹85,000 crore AUM), they meet all SEBI requirements — ₹50 crore net worth, 50% independent board, restricted to fund management. Their flagship Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund has consistently outperformed many larger AMC schemes. This shows that AMC size does not guarantee performance — what matters is the quality of the fund management team, the investment process, and adherence to the scheme mandate. Distributors should evaluate the AMC's track record, investment philosophy, and governance standards — not just brand name.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
SEBI increased the minimum net worth to ₹50 crore to ensure that AMCs have adequate financial resources to invest in technology, talent, risk management systems, and compliance infrastructure. A higher net worth also acts as a buffer against operational risks and ensures that only serious, well-capitalized entities enter the mutual fund business. This change raised the entry barrier and improved overall industry quality.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
