Investor Education

Understanding Alternative
Investment Funds in India

A comprehensive guide to SEBI-regulated AIFs — what they are, how they work, their advantages, and how institutional-grade strategies deliver superior risk-adjusted returns for India's discerning investors.

Fundamentals

What Is an Alternative Investment Fund?

An Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) is a privately pooled investment vehicle established in India that collects funds from sophisticated investors for investing in accordance with a defined investment policy. Unlike publicly available instruments such as mutual funds, AIFs offer access to high-growth, institutional-grade strategies.

Governed by the SEBI (Alternative Investment Funds) Regulations, 2012, AIFs operate under a rigorous regulatory framework that mandates transparent governance, periodic disclosures, and custodial safeguards. They can be structured as trusts, companies, LLPs, or body corporates.

AIFs encompass private equity, venture capital, real estate, distressed assets, structured credit, infrastructure, and hedge fund strategies. The Indian AIF ecosystem manages commitments exceeding  ₹15 lakh crore — a testament to the growing institutional appetite for alternative strategies.

“Any fund established or incorporated in India which is a privately pooled investment vehicle which collects funds from sophisticated investors, whether Indian or foreign, for investing in accordance with a defined investment policy for the benefit of its investors.”

— SEBI (AIF) Regulations, 2012

Regulator

Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI)

Governing Law

SEBI (AIF) Regulations, 2012

Min Investment

As per SEBI AIF Regulations

Eligible Investors

HNIs, Family Offices, Institutions, NRIs

Structure

SEBI Regulated AIF Structure

SEBI Classification

The Three Categories of AIFs

SEBI classifies Alternative Investment Funds into three distinct categories, each with specific investment mandates, regulatory constraints, and risk-return profiles.

Category I

Growth & Impact Capital

Funds that invest in sectors considered socially or economically desirable by the government. These receive incentives and concessions due to their developmental impact.

Venture CapitalAngel FundsInfrastructureSocial VenturesSME Funds
Category II

Private Equity & Credit

Funds that do not fall under Category I or III and do not undertake leverage except for day-to-day operational needs. This is the largest AIF segment.

Private EquityPrivate CreditReal EstateDistressed AssetsFund of Funds
GHL India Ventures operates as a Category II AIF
Category III

Trading & Hedge Strategies

Funds that employ diverse or complex strategies and may use leverage through investment in listed or unlisted derivatives.

Hedge FundsPIPE FundsLong-Short EquityDerivatives
Why AIFs

Advantages of Investing in Alternative Investment Funds

AIFs offer sophisticated investors access to strategies, asset classes, and return profiles that are simply not available through conventional instruments.

Alpha Generation

AIFs have historically generated significant alpha over public market benchmarks, with 75% of AIFs successfully delivering positive alpha.

True Portfolio Diversification

Access asset classes with low correlation to public markets — stressed real estate, private credit, early-stage ventures, and infrastructure.

Institutional Governance

SEBI-mandated compliance ensures quarterly NAV reporting, third-party audits, custodial safeguards, and transparent fee structures.

Professional Fund Management

Capital managed by experienced investment professionals with deep domain expertise and proven track records in complex deals.

Access to Exclusive Deals

AIFs participate in deal flows individuals cannot access — NCLT resolutions, pre-IPO placements, structured credit opportunities.

Tax Pass-Through Structure

Category I and II AIFs enjoy a tax pass-through regime for all income except business income, avoiding double taxation.

Customised Strategy Alignment

Unlike one-size-fits-all mutual funds, AIFs can be designed around specific themes matching investor conviction.

NRI & Global Participation

Qualified NRIs can invest through NRO accounts with full FEMA/RBI compliance, providing a regulated gateway to Indian alternatives.

India's AIF Industry

A Market in Unprecedented Growth

India's alternative investment ecosystem has entered a defining phase — with commitments growing at a 49% CAGR over the last decade, AIFs are now a cornerstone of sophisticated wealth management.

₹15L Cr+
Total AIF Commitments
As of Sep 2025
1,550+
Registered AIFs
SEBI Registered
49%
10-Year CAGR
Commitment Growth
75%
Alpha Generators
Positive alpha vs benchmarks

Source: SEBI Statistics, PMS Bazaar Industry Report, NSE AIF Primer. Data for illustrative purposes.

The Process

How an AIF Investment Works

From commitment to exit — a structured, transparent journey managed by experienced professionals under SEBI oversight.

01

Commitment

Investor commits capital via the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM) after thorough KYC and eligibility verification.

02

Drawdown

Capital is called in tranches as investment opportunities arise, minimising negative carry on uncommitted capital.

03

Deployment

Funds are invested per the defined strategy — stressed assets, private equity, structured credit, or venture deals.

04

Management

Active portfolio management with quarterly NAV reporting, compliance audits, and transparent investor communications.

05

Exit & Distribution

Returns are distributed as investments are exited — through sales, IPOs, secondary markets, or in-specie distribution.

Our Approach

What GHL India Ventures Does Differently

As a SEBI-registered Category II AIF (Reg. No. IN/AIF2/2425/1517), GHL India Ventures combines deep market intelligence with disciplined risk management across two high-conviction strategies — both designed to capture value where conventional capital cannot reach.

01

Stressed Real Estate Recovery

We acquire distressed and stalled real estate projects through NCLT resolutions under the IBC at significant discounts. Our team revitalises these assets — clearing legal encumbrances, completing construction, and repositioning for sale or lease.

NCLT AcquisitionsIBC FrameworkAsset RevitalisationChennai Focus
02

Early-Stage Venture Capital

We back visionary founders building transformative businesses across India’s most promising sectors — fintech, healthtech, cleantech, and deep technology. Our approach is conviction-based, not trend-chasing.

Pre-Series A to Series AFintechHealthTechCleanTech
03

Institutional-Grade Governance

Every investment undergoes 360-degree forensic diligence. We maintain quarterly NAV disclosures, third-party audits, custodian-held assets, and open-door governance.

Quarterly NAVThird-Party AuditsCustodial SafeguardsESG Integration
04

Accessible Entry via SEBI Co-Invest Framework

For investors seeking alternative entry, GHL offers a SEBI Co-Invest Framework — providing access to institutional-grade returns through a structured co-invest instrument.

Contact for DetailsCo-Invest StructureStructured ReturnsSalaried Professionals
Regulatory Framework

How SEBI Protects AIF Investors

India's AIF regulatory framework is among the most robust globally, ensuring investor protection, transparency, and institutional accountability at every stage.

Mandatory Registration

Every AIF must be registered with SEBI before accepting any investor commitments, with stringent checks on governance and compliance.

Private Placement Memorandum

AIFs must issue a detailed PPM disclosing investment strategy, risk factors, fee structure, track record, and exit mechanisms.

Custodian & Auditor Requirements

Assets are held by independent custodians, not the fund manager. Annual audits ensure no conflicts of interest.

NAV & Reporting Standards

AIFs must report Net Asset Value periodically with enhanced disclosure norms on portfolio composition and performance.

Investment Restrictions

Category I and II AIFs cannot undertake leverage beyond day-to-day operations. Concentration limits and related-party restrictions apply.

Due Diligence Obligations

Following 2024 amendments, AIFs and Key Management Personnel must conduct specific due diligence on investors and investments.

Compare

AIF vs Traditional Investments

See how Alternative Investment Funds stack up against conventional instruments on the parameters that matter most to sophisticated investors.

ParameterCategory II AIFPMSMutual FundsFixed Deposits
Minimum InvestmentAs per SEBI AIF Regulations₹50 Lakhs₹500₹1,000
RegulatorSEBISEBISEBIRBI
Asset ClassesPE, Real Estate, Credit, VC, DistressedListed Equities & BondsListed SecuritiesBank Deposits
Investor BaseHNIs, Family Offices, InstitutionsHNIsRetail & InstitutionalEveryone
LiquidityLow (3–7 year lock-in)MediumHigh (open-ended)Medium
Return PotentialHigh (strategy dependent)Moderate-HighModerateLow-Moderate
Tax TreatmentPass-through (Cat I & II)Individual taxationFund-level + InvestorIncome tax slab
DiversificationUnlisted, alternative assetsListed market exposureListed market exposureNone
Manager Skin in GameMandatory co-investmentOptionalOptionalN/A
Insights

Why Now Is the Right Time for AIFs

Macro tailwinds, regulatory reforms, and a maturing ecosystem make this a defining moment for alternative capital in India.

Market Trend

India’s AIF Ecosystem Crosses ₹23 Lakh Crore

Combined PMS and AIF assets have grown at a 31% CAGR over the last decade, driven by HNIs and institutional investors seeking diversification.

Regulatory Reform

SEBI’s 2025 Reforms Reshape the Landscape

From the new Co-Investment Vehicle framework to Accredited Investor-only schemes, SEBI is creating a more flexible, investor-friendly environment.

Opportunity

Private Credit Emerges as a Powerhouse

Private credit now accounts for 15% of total AIF commitments at nearly ₹2 lakh crore — up from just 6% five years ago.

Growth Driver

Stressed Real Estate: India’s Hidden Alpha

With thousands of stalled projects and a robust IBC framework, stressed real estate offers deep-discount entry points for patient capital.

Global Context

India’s Alternative Allocation Gap

Alternative investments represent 15–20% of HNI portfolios globally but less than 5% in India. With 36 lakh+ HNIs, the runway is massive.

Future Outlook

The Road to ₹25 Lakh Crore by 2027

With government support, growing NPS allocations to alternatives, and increasing family office participation, AIFs are projected to reach 15% of India’s total wealth management AUM.

Frequently Asked Questions

AIF Questions, Answered

AIFs are designed for sophisticated investors. Eligible participants include Indian residents, HNIs, family offices, corporates, banks, NBFCs, insurance companies, pension funds, and NRIs (through NRO accounts). The minimum investment is as per SEBI AIF Regulations for Category I and II AIFs. SEBI has also introduced the concept of Accredited Investors who may access specific schemes with differentiated terms.

While both are pooled investment vehicles regulated by SEBI, they differ significantly. Mutual funds are publicly offered, have low minimums (₹500), and primarily invest in listed securities. AIFs are privately placed with higher minimums as per SEBI AIF Regulations, invest in unlisted and alternative assets, have longer lock-in periods, and offer access to strategies not available through public markets.

Close-ended Category I and II AIFs typically have a tenure of 3 to 7 years, with a possible extension of up to 2 years (subject to investor approval). Category III AIFs may be open-ended or close-ended. The lock-in reflects the nature of illiquid, alternative assets that require time for value creation.

AIF fee structures typically include a Management Fee (1–2% annually on committed or invested capital), a Performance Fee or Carried Interest (typically 15–20% of profits above a hurdle rate), and operational expenses. All fees must be disclosed in the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM).

Category I and II AIFs enjoy a tax pass-through status for all income except business income. This means investors are taxed as if they directly invested — capital gains, interest, and dividends flow through to the investor and are taxed at their individual rates. Category III AIFs are taxed at the fund level.

Yes. NRIs can invest in Indian AIFs through their NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary) account. The fund handles all FEMA and RBI compliance requirements. NRI investors are subject to India’s tax treaties (DTAAs) and may have withholding tax obligations.

GHL India Ventures is registered with SEBI as a Category II Alternative Investment Fund under Registration Number IN/AIF2/2425/1517. The fund is headquartered at 2D, Queens Court, No. 6, Montieth Road, Egmore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu – 600 008, India.

Get Started

Ready to Explore Alternative Investments?

Schedule a private consultation with our investment advisory team. Learn how GHL India Ventures' institutional-grade strategies can work for your portfolio.

Or call us directly: +91 7200 255 252  |  info@ghlindiaventures.com

Important Disclaimer: Investments in Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) and Non-Convertible Debentures (NCDs) are subject to market risks including the possible loss of principal amount invested. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The information on this page is for educational and general informational purposes only and does not constitute an offer, invitation, solicitation, or investment advice. Prospective investors must read the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM) and all scheme-related documents carefully before making any investment decisions. The industry statistics and data referenced are sourced from publicly available reports and are provided for illustrative purposes. SEBI Registration No. IN/AIF2/2425/1517. Category II AIF minimum investment is as per SEBI AIF Regulations. The fund does not guarantee any returns.