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How ETF Units Are Created
and Redeemed in India

Unlike a mutual fund, an ETF's outstanding unit count is not fixed — it expands and contracts every trading day based on demand and the relationship between the ETF's market price and its underlying value. This elastic supply is what keeps ETF prices honest.

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The Big Picture
Why ETF unit supply is flexible — and why that matters

A traditional mutual fund issues and redeems units directly with investors at the end-of-day NAV. An ETF is different: its units trade on a stock exchange all day long, just like a share. But there is a powerful backstage mechanism that ensures the ETF's market price cannot stray far from the value of what it holds.

That mechanism is the creation and redemption process, operated exclusively by special institutional players called Authorized Participants (APs). When an ETF is in high demand and its market price exceeds its NAV, APs create new units to satisfy that demand and capture a profit. When the ETF is out of favour and its market price drops below NAV, APs redeem units, shrinking the supply and pulling the price back up.

Major AP names in India (examples): ICICI Securities, HDFC Securities, Kotak Securities, SBI Capital Markets, JM Financial, Nuvama, Motilal Oswal, IIFL, Jane Street (through its registered entities), Goldman Sachs (India) Securities, Morgan Stanley India and Nomura India are names often seen in ETF market-making/AP ecosystems. The exact AP panel is scheme-specific and can change — always verify the latest list in the ETF's SID/KIM and AMC website.

About turnover data: Exchange-wise ETF turnover is public (NSE/BSE), but AP-wise annual ETF turnover is generally not disclosed in a consolidated public format by scheme. So precise yearly turnover by each AP is usually not reliably available.

Key insight: The number of ETF units outstanding is not fixed. It can grow from 1 crore to 10 crore units or shrink from 10 crore to 2 crore units over time — all driven by this creation-redemption cycle. This is entirely different from a company's shares, where the share count is relatively stable.

The Creation Process
How new ETF units come into existence

Creation happens when the ETF's market price on the exchange is higher than its NAV — it is trading at a premium. An AP can exploit this by delivering the underlying basket of securities to the AMC and receiving new ETF units worth the same amount. Because those units can be sold on the exchange at the (higher) market price, the AP pockets the difference.

1
AP spots a premium: NIFTYBEES is trading at ₹252 on NSE but its NAV (based on live Nifty 50 stock prices) is ₹250. There is a ₹2 per unit premium.
2
AP assembles the basket: The AP buys all 50 Nifty 50 stocks in exactly the proportions required to form a "creation unit" — typically 50,000–1,00,000 ETF units worth of stocks.
3
AP delivers to AMC: The AP transfers this stock basket to the AMC's designated custodian account (e.g., HDFC AMC's custodian). The AMC verifies the basket against the Portfolio Deposit file published that morning.
4
AMC credits new units: The AMC mints new ETF units equal to the value delivered and credits them to the AP's demat account. No cash changes hands in a pure in-kind creation.
5
AP sells on exchange: The AP sells the newly created units on NSE at the prevailing ₹252 market price, earning ≈ ₹2 per unit profit. This arbitrage activity increases supply, pushing the ETF price back down toward ₹250 NAV.

Net result: More units exist, the ETF's market price comes down toward NAV, and the premium disappears. The ETF's AUM (Assets Under Management) has increased — the fund now holds more stocks.

The Redemption Process
How ETF units are destroyed

Redemption is the mirror image. It occurs when the ETF's market price is lower than its NAV — it is trading at a discount. An AP can buy cheap ETF units on the exchange and exchange them with the AMC for the more valuable underlying basket of stocks (or cash).

1
AP spots a discount: NIFTYBEES is trading at ₹248 on NSE but its NAV is ₹250. There is a ₹2 per unit discount.
2
AP buys ETF units: The AP purchases a large block of NIFTYBEES units on NSE at ₹248 — a full redemption lot (e.g., 50,000 units).
3
AP redeems with AMC: The AP submits the units to the AMC for redemption. The AMC cancels (burns) those units and transfers the equivalent basket of underlying stocks to the AP's custodian account.
4
AP sells the stocks: The AP sells the underlying stocks on the exchange at their fair market value (≈ ₹250 worth per ETF unit). The AP earns roughly ₹2 per unit profit on the spread.
5
Price recovers: The buying pressure on the ETF (AP accumulating units) and selling pressure on the underlying stocks reduce supply of the ETF and increase stock supply simultaneously — closing the discount and pushing the ETF price back to NAV.

Net result: Fewer units exist, the ETF's market price rises back toward NAV, and the discount disappears. The ETF's AUM has decreased.

Creation vs Redemption at a Glance
The two directions of the mechanism
CREATION ↑ UNITS
Market Price > NAV (Premium)
AP buys underlying basket → delivers to AMC → receives new units → sells units on exchange at premium. Units outstanding increase. ETF AUM grows. Price premium shrinks.
REDEMPTION ↓ UNITS
Market Price < NAV (Discount)
AP buys ETF units on exchange at discount → redeems with AMC → receives underlying basket → sells basket at fair value. Units outstanding decrease. ETF AUM shrinks. Price discount shrinks.
How It Works for Gold ETFs
In-cash creation instead of in-kind

For equity ETFs, creation is typically "in-kind" — the AP delivers the actual stocks. For Gold ETFs in India, the process is slightly different because SEBI mandates that gold ETFs hold 99.5%+ purity physical gold.

An AP submits cash equivalent to the NAV to the AMC. The AMC uses this cash to buy physical gold from LBMA-approved refiners or RBI-approved domestic refiners and stores it in designated vaults (BRINKS, Sequel Logistics, etc.). New units are credited to the AP's account in exchange. Physical gold never leaves the vault — the AP just receives electronic units representing ownership of that gold.

Example — Gold ETF creation: Nippon India Gold BeES has an NAV of ₹6,500 per unit (≈ 1 gram of gold equivalent). If the market price rises to ₹6,600 (₹100 premium), an AP pays ₹6,500 × creation lot (say 1,000 units = ₹65 lakh) in cash to the AMC. The AMC buys ~1,000 grams of gold. The AP receives 1,000 new GOLDBEES units and sells them at ₹6,600, earning ₹1 lakh profit. The premium is eliminated.

For Debt ETFs (G-Sec ETFs, SDL ETFs), the AP delivers government bonds or state development loans to the AMC in exchange for units — similar to equity in-kind creation but using fixed income instruments.

The Portfolio Deposit File
The recipe for each creation basket

Each morning before trading begins, the AMC publishes a Portfolio Deposit (PD) file on NSE. This file specifies exactly which securities and in what quantities an AP must deliver to create one creation unit. For a Nifty 50 ETF, this file lists all 50 stocks with the exact number of shares required for, say, a 50,000-unit creation block.

The PD file changes daily as index weights shift and as the fund's outstanding units change. APs download this file each morning and use it to assemble creation baskets with precision. If an AP delivers even one share too few or too many, the creation is rejected.

Why does this matter for investors? The PD file is publicly available on NSE's website. By reading it, you can see exactly what's inside an ETF on any given day — useful for verifying that the ETF is actually holding what it claims to hold and not deviating from the index.

Creation Unit Sizes in India
Minimum blocks for institutional participation
ETF CategoryTypical Creation UnitApprox. ValueCreation Mode
Nifty 50 ETFs (NIFTYBEES)1,00,000 units~₹2.5 CrIn-kind (stocks)
Nifty Bank ETFs (BANKBEES)50,000 units~₹2 CrIn-kind (stocks)
Gold ETFs (GOLDBEES)1,000 units~₹65 LCash (gold purchase)
Govt Securities ETFs10,000 units~₹1 CrIn-kind (bonds)
Sectoral ETFs10,000–50,000 units₹50L–₹2.5 CrIn-kind (stocks)

These large minimum sizes mean that direct creation and redemption is only practical for large institutions, hedge funds, and registered APs — not retail investors. Retail investors simply buy and sell existing units on the secondary market.

What This Means for You as a Retail Investor
Practical takeaways from the creation-redemption mechanism
Large-cap ETFs trade close to NAV: Because APs can quickly and cheaply assemble the Nifty 50 basket, premiums and discounts on NIFTYBEES are typically under 0.05%. Your trade price is almost exactly fair value.
Illiquid underlying = wider premium/discount: If the underlying stocks are hard to buy in large quantities (e.g., a small-cap ETF or an international ETF), APs face higher assembly costs. They demand a bigger premium before creating units. You may overpay if you buy at that premium.
AUM growth is a sign of demand: When an ETF's AUM is steadily growing, it means APs are regularly creating new units — demand from investors is exceeding supply. This is generally healthy. Sudden AUM drops can indicate mass redemptions or AMC closure.
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Very small ETFs may have fewer APs: If only one or two APs service an ETF, the creation-redemption mechanism is weaker, premiums can persist, and liquidity suffers. Check how many authorized participants are registered for an ETF before investing significant capital.
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