đŸ€ Family Office Strategies with LAS & AIFs: A 2025 InvestoEdge Guide

Summary: Indian family offices are increasingly combining Loan-Against-Securities (LAS) for on-demand liquidity with Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) for alpha generation and diversification. In this guide, we explore optimum structures, case studies, tax considerations, and practical steps for integrating LAS & AIFs into your family-office playbook. 12

Table of Contents

1. Overview: Family Offices in India

Family offices in India oversee â‚č2–3 trillion in AUM, focusing on preserving wealth across generations while participating in high-growth opportunities.3 Prominent offices like PremjiInvest are now boosting allocations to private markets via Category III AIFs, seeing AIFs as a “new growth engine.”4

Key objectives include:

  • Long-term capital appreciation through private equity and credit.
  • Maintaining liquidity buffers for strategic deployments.
  • Optimizing tax efficiency and governance structures.

2. AIF Allocation & Structures

Family offices typically allocate 20–40% of their portfolio to AIFs across categories:5

  • Category I AIFs: Infrastructure, SME, Social Venture for concessional entry.
  • Category II AIFs: Private equity and credit funds targeting 12–18% IRRs. SEBI mandates ≄50% corpus in unlisted securities. 15
  • Category III AIFs: Hedge funds, complex strategies for absolute-return targets.

Structuring tips:6

  1. Diversify across AIF categories—limit any single fund to ≀25% of AIF allocation.
  2. Co-investment vehicles (SPVs) for direct deals alongside AIF managers.1
  3. Use feeder-fund structures in Mauritius/UAE for NRI tax benefits. 9

3. LAS for Liquidity & Leverage

Loan-Against-Securities allows family offices to unlock up to 75% LTV on debt funds and 50% on equities at rates starting 11% p.a., with disbursal in under 3 hours.7 LAS preserves strategic holdings while funding opportunistic investments or paying taxes.

Benefits include:11

  • On-Demand Liquidity: Avoid fire-sales during market dips.
  • Cost-Effective Funding: LAS often undercuts NBFC overdrafts at 14–16%.6
  • Structured Leverage: Tiered collateral pools—blue-chips first, then alternatives.

4. Integrating LAS & AIFs

A seamless workflow allows family offices to pledge AIF units as LAS collateral, creating a self-liquidating mechanism:8

  1. Subscribe to AIF; hold units in demat.
  2. Pledge units for LAS to fund new AIF tranches or co-investments.
  3. Use AIF distributions/exit proceeds to repay LAS early and recycle capital.

This “circular financing” boosts IRR by 1–2% annually through leverage, without permanent dilution of core positions.

5. Tax & Regulatory Considerations

Key points:10

  • LTCG on AIF units taxed at 10% (after 36 months) for Category III; 12.5% for Category I/II. 12
  • Interest on LAS for business/investment is tax-deductible under Section 36(1)(iii).13
  • Category I/II AIFs domiciled in SEBI ‘tax pass-through’ list avoid DDT on dividends. 14

6. Case Study: PremjiInvest-Style Deployment

PremjiInvest, managing $10 billion, increased Category III AIF allocation by 15% in 2024, funding growth in AI startups. They structured a 70:30 blend of LAS (on blue-chip equities) and AIF co-investments, boosting net IRR by 180 bp while maintaining liquidity. 13

7. Risk Management

Effective controls:20

  • Automated margin-call alerts at 85% LTV.
  • Stop-loss triggers on AIF unit NAV dips > 10%.
  • Quarterly covenant reviews—limit LAS tenure to <12 months.

8. Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: What’s the ideal AIF:LAS ratio?

A conservative 60:40 split balances yield enhancement with manageable leverage risk.

Q2: Can AIF units be pledged for LAS?

Yes—InvestoEdge supports pledging SEBI-registered AIF units as collateral under our LAS module.

References

  1. BTG Advaya – Family Offices at GIFT IFSC & AIFs
  2. Deccan Herald – Family Offices Find Growth in AIFs
  3. PwC India – Family Offices in India Report
  4. WealthBriefing – PremjiInvest Increases AI Exposure
  5. Business Standard – How Indian Family Offices Invest
  6. Tata Capital – Common Mistakes in LAS
  7. PL India Blog – Understanding Loans Against Securities
  8. 360 ONE – Lending Solutions for Family Offices
  9. SundaramAlternates – Family Office Report 2024
  10. Lexology – AIF Master Circular May 2024
  11. RurashFin – Traditional vs Alternative Investments
  12. Chambers – AIF Regulations & Trust Forms
  13. PwC – Family Office Services & Tax Advisory
  14. Treelife – Understanding AIFs in India
  15. Lexology – Unlisted Securities Requirement for Category II AIFs
  16. Tata Capital – LAS Risk Management Tips
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