If you’ve ever wondered what’s different about the way rich investors handle their money compared to the average person, Portfolio Management Services (PMS) is a big part of the answer. It’s a licensed investment service where a professional registered with SEBI invests your money in a personalized portfolio based on your financial goals and risk appetite.

This guide will explain what PMS is, its key features, the types available, the regulatory rules that protect you, and what to watch out for before you invest.

What Are Portfolio Management Services?

Portfolio Management Services is a professionally managed investment solution for high-net-worth individuals (HNIs). A portfolio manager creates and actively manages a personalized mix of investments in your name. Unlike a mutual fund, where your money is pooled with thousands of other investors into one fund.

According to SEBI’s investor education portal, PMS provides direct ownership of stocks and other assets in the name of the investor, which enables a very customized investment approach depending on individual risk appetite, preferences, and goals.

Key Features of Portfolio Management Services

Let’s take it apart. Here are the features that distinguish PMS from other investment products.

1. Personalised Investment Strategy

PMS is made for you, not the mass market. The portfolio manager studies your income, financial goals, time horizon, and risk appetite before investing a single rupee. They then build a strategy that fits your situation.

This is unlike mutual funds, where the mandate is fixed regardless of individual investor profiles.

2. Direct Ownership of Securities

One of the major visible differences between PMS and a mutual fund is ownership. In PMS, the stocks/bonds or other assets are parked in your name in your Demat account. You are not buying units in a pooled fund; you own the actual securities.

So you always have a clear overview of your portfolio.

3. Active Portfolio Management

Your portfolio managers will monitor market conditions and make adjustments. They make buy and sell decisions based on research, market analysis, and your agreed investment strategy. This is an active approach, not a passive approach that simply tracks a benchmark.

4. Three Types of PMS to Choose From

PMS in India is categorized into three main categories based on the degree of control and investor participation. This is what each one means:

5. High Minimum Investment Threshold

PMS is not meant for all investors. SEBI has mandated a minimum investment of Rs 50 lakh from the client. This threshold means that PMS targets investors with significant capital who are able to bear the risks associated with a concentrated, actively managed portfolio.

6. Transparency and Regular Reporting

PMS providers are required to regularly update investors with performance reports, fees, and risk disclosures. You get regular statements that outline your portfolio holdings, your performance against benchmarks, and any changes made during the reporting period.

This level of reporting gives you a clear picture of how your money is performing and whether the strategy still remains on course to meet your goals.

7. Tax-Aware Investment Decisions

Portfolio managers consider the tax implications of investment decisions that may improve after-tax returns. As each portfolio is separate, the manager can time transactions to minimize short-term capital gains, manage dividend income, and time exits in a tax-efficient way. This is more difficult to do in a pooled fund.

8. Independent Custodian for Asset Safety

SEBI wants an independent custodian to hold investor assets to remove a conflict of interest. Your securities are held by a third-party custodian, totally separate from the portfolio manager. This shields your assets even if the management firm runs into any operational issues.

How SEBI Regulates Portfolio Management Services

PMS is a safe investment option due to the oversight of SEBI. Let’s go through the rules that protect you as an investor.

All PMS providers are required to register with SEBI and also meet certain criteria, such as fee and net worth. The registration must be renewed every three years.

The key regulatory safeguards under SEBI (Portfolio Managers) Regulations, 2020, are:

These rules mean that when you invest through a SEBI-registered PMS provider, you have a clear legal framework working for you.

Benefits of Choosing Portfolio Management Services

Now that you know the features, here are the tangible benefits of PMS for eligible investors.

Management by experts. You get a dedicated portfolio manager who will grow your wealth with well-researched decisions. This is full-time work with research teams and market data.”

Goal alignment. Your portfolio is based on specific goals, whether that is wealth preservation or capital growth over 10 years or producing a regular income stream.

Diversification of asset classes. PMS invests in a range of asset classes and sectors to help reduce risk and aim for better returns.

Transparency. You know what you own, what you paid for it, and what returns you are getting. No hidden pooled structures.

Risks You Should Know Before Investing

PMS is not a return product. This is what you will need to factor in.

Market risk is the risk that market fluctuations and changes in the macroeconomy will affect the performance of the portfolio. Concentration risk is the risk that a focused portfolio can amplify when certain investments do not perform well. Liquidity risk comes when you put your money in less liquid assets like small-cap stocks that may have difficulties in unfavorable market conditions. Managerial risk means that the portfolio performance is heavily dependent on the skill of the portfolio manager.

PMS also tends to have higher management and performance fees than mutual funds, and the investments are subject to market volatility, so you generally need to be in it for the long haul.

Next Steps Before Investing: Check the portfolio manager’s track record, understand the fee structure, read the disclosure document carefully, and confirm that the minimum investment amount fits your financial plan.

PMS vs Mutual Funds: A Quick Comparison

FeaturePMSMutual Funds
OwnershipDirect (securities in your name)Indirect (units in a pooled fund)
Minimum InvestmentRs 50 lakhs (SEBI mandate)As low as Rs 100 (SIP)
CustomisationHighLow
TransparencyHigh (individual account)Moderate (scheme-level)
Tax ManagementIndividual-levelScheme-level
SEBI RegulationYesYes



Know More : PMS Vs Mutual Fund

How Snazzy Wealth Approaches PMS Distribution

Snazzy Wealth is a SEBI-compliant distribution and support partner for PMS products. Instead of creating a one-size-fits-all plan, it begins with understanding your financial goals, risk appetite, and investment timeline before recommending any PMS provider.

Snazzy Wealth connects clients with registered PMS providers across India and provides clients with research-backed scheme selection and periodic portfolio reviews. The emphasis is on ensuring the PMS strategy you select is really aligned with your current financial position and where you want to be.

If you’re thinking of PMS and want to figure out which strategy is right for your goals, it’s a good idea to get in touch with the team at Snazzy Wealth.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the minimum investment required for portfolio management services in India?

Portfolio Management Services: SEBI has stipulated a minimum investment of Rs 50 lakhs. This applies to all PMS provider companies registered in India. This threshold is designed to make PMS suitable for high-net-worth investors who can absorb the market risks that are inherent in the long term.

2. Is PMS regulated by SEBI?

Yes. PMS providers in India are required to register with SEBI under SEBI (Portfolio Managers) Regulations, 2020. They are subject to rigorous compliance requirements, including annual audits, mandatory disclosures, appointment of a compliance officer, and a ban on unfair trading practices.

3. How is PMS different from a mutual fund?

In PMS, your securities are directly with you in your demat account. In a mutual fund, you buy units in a collective fund. PMS provides much more flexibility for customization, direct ownership, and individual tax management. Mutual funds are more accessible with lower minimum investments and standardized fund mandates.

4. What are the different types of PMS available in India?

There are three main types: Discretionary PMS (the manager makes all decisions for you); Non-Discretionary PMS (you approve each transaction); Advisory PMS (the manager advises, and you execute trades yourself). Strategies also differ across asset classes such as equity, debt, hybrid, and multi-asset PMS.

5. What should I check before choosing a PMS provider?

Check the SEBI registration of the provider, their track record of investments, fee structure (management and performance fees), investment philosophy, and the disclosure document. Also, look at the terms around exit, including notice periods and any charges. You can compare the options against your specific goals by speaking with a registered distributor like Snazzy Wealth.

Disclaimer: Investments in portfolio management services are subject to market risks. There is no assurance that the investment objective of a PMS strategy will be achieved. Please read all scheme-related documents carefully before investing. Snazzy Wealth Pvt. Ltd. (ARN-259333) is a distributor and is not registered as an investment adviser with SEBI (Investment Advisers) Regulations, 2013.