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The minimum investment from one person is ₹10,000,000. The minimum corpus of the funds is ₹200,000,000. At any time, not more than 1000 investors are allowed. The initial contribution of the fund manager or promoter should be 2.5% or ₹50,000,000, whichever is less (for category 1 and 2) and 5% or ₹100,000,000 for Category 3 AIF [3]
As the definition of alternative investments is broad, data and research vary widely across the investment classes. For example, art and wine investments may lack high-quality data. [ 10 ] The Goizueta Business School at Emory University has established the Emory Center for Alternative Investments to provide research and a forum for discussion ...
As at 2016, €435 billion in alternative assets were held in Irish QIAIFs. Ireland is the fourth-largest domicile for Alternative Investment Funds ("AIF") in the EU with 9.9% of the €4.4 trillion EU AIF market, behind Germany (31.7%), France (21.3%) and Luxembourg (13%). [10]
[1] [2] [3] In Union Budget 2015-16, India's then Finance Minister, Arun Jaitley announced the creation of NIIFL. It was proposed to be established as an Alternative Investment Fund with an inflow of ₹ 20,000 crore from the Government of India, with their commitment being 49% of the total corpus. [4]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Investment funds" ... Qualifying investor alternative investment fund; R.
Examples of MRIs include loans to mission-aligned non-profit organizations (e.g., charter schools, hospitals or research centers) that are expected to pay back loans with interest, as well as investments in for-profit social impact companies, social impact funds, socially responsible fixed income (bond) funds, impact-oriented private equity ...
• being paid for directly by the end user (i.e., the investor) rather than by the alternative investment fund or its manager (due to the conflict of interest created if the fund or its manager is the “client”) or bundled as part of a wider service (for example as is the case with a fund of funds).
[2] According to SEBI, during FY 2022–23, 73% of mutual fund units were redeemed within 2 years of investment. Only investments in 3% of the units continued for more than 5 years. [3] [4] According to the Reserve Bank of India report, mutual funds attracted 6% of household savings in FY2023 and less than 1% went into direct equities.