Dos and Don'ts for Mutual Fund Distributors
The Dos and Don'ts for Mutual Fund Distributors is a comprehensive code of conduct established by AMFI (Association of Mutual Funds in India) under SEBI's direc...
Dos and Don'ts for Mutual Fund Distributors
The Dos and Don'ts for Mutual Fund Distributors is a comprehensive code of conduct established by AMFI (Association of Mutual Funds in India) under SEBI's direction, governing the professional behaviour and ethical standards of every AMFI-registered distributor (ARN holder). This code covers commission disclosure, prohibition of return guarantees, ban on commission rebating, mandatory KYC compliance, suitability assessment requirements, documentation standards, and anti-mis-selling provisions. Violation of these rules can result in suspension or cancellation of the distributor's ARN registration, monetary penalties, and legal action. Every NISM VA candidate must know these rules thoroughly because they form the backbone of professional conduct in the mutual fund distribution industry.
These Dos and Don'ts are not theoretical — they are the rules that protect a distributor's livelihood and clients' wealth. Numerous distributors have lost their ARN registrations for violating these straightforward rules. The critical DOs are as follows. DO: always complete KYC before processing any transaction — no exceptions, including for family members. DO: disclose commission structure to clients when asked — transparency builds trust. DO: maintain written records of all advice provided — if a client later claims an unsuitable product was recommended, written records serve as the primary defence. DO: recommend products based on the client's risk profile, goals, and time horizon — not based on which scheme pays the highest commission. The critical DON'Ts are equally important. DON'T ever guarantee or promise returns — even verbally, even casually. If a complaint alleges a return guarantee and SEBI investigates, the distributor risks losing their ARN. DON'T rebate commission back to investors — this means no cashbacks, gifts, discounts, or any incentive funded from commissions. SEBI banned this to ensure distributors recommend products based on suitability, not price competition. DON'T churn portfolios — repeatedly switching clients between schemes to earn fresh commissions is a serious violation. DON'T make false or exaggerated claims about any scheme. And DON'T execute transactions without proper authorization from the client.
A Practical Example
Two contrasting case studies illustrate the importance of following the code. Case 1 (Compliant): Deepak, a distributor in Ahmedabad, had a client Shreya, a 28-year-old IT professional wanting to invest ₹50,000/month. Deepak completed her KYC, assessed her risk profile (aggressive — 25-year horizon), and documented the recommendation in writing: "Recommended 60% in flexi-cap equity, 25% in mid-cap, 15% in international equity fund based on long-term wealth creation goal and high risk tolerance." Shreya signed the recommendation letter. When markets fell 15%, Shreya panicked and complained that she had not been warned about risks. Deepak produced the signed recommendation letter showing the "Very High Risk" designation and explanation of potential drawdowns. The complaint was dismissed. Case 2 (Non-Compliant): Amit, a distributor in Delhi, told his client Prakash, a 60-year-old retiree, to invest his ₹40 lakh retirement corpus in a small-cap fund, verbally stating it would "give 20% returns easily." No KYC was completed, no risk assessment done, and no written documentation maintained. He also rebated ₹20,000 from his commission as a "joining bonus." When the small-cap fund fell 30%, Prakash lost ₹12 lakhs and filed a complaint with AMFI. Investigation revealed: no documentation, verbal return guarantee, commission rebating, and unsuitable product recommendation. Result: Amit's ARN was suspended for 2 years, and he was required to pay compensation to Prakash.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
This is a grey area. Small festive gifts (sweets, calendars) funded from the distributor's own pocket — not from commissions — are generally acceptable as a business courtesy. However, expensive gifts, cashbacks, gold coins, or any incentive that is effectively a return of commission to the investor is prohibited. The test is: would this gift influence the client's investment decision? If yes, it is likely a violation. The prudent approach is to keep gifts modest and clearly separate from commissions.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
