Infrastructure investment trusts (InvITs) sit in an interesting corner of the market: visible, listed, and yet not clearly understood. They are often pitched as “earn from toll roads” or “own power lines”, which is directionally correct, but intellectually lazy. The reality is more nuanced, and more compelling, if understood properly.
What Are InvITs?
At their core, InvITs are trust structures that own and operate income-generating infrastructure assets, such as roads, transmission lines, gas pipelines, warehouses, telecom towers, etc. They are regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) and are listed on the stock exchanges, making them accessible like equities.
Think of their structure as similar to mutual funds. Instead of buying shares of companies, you are buying units of a Trust that owns real assets, that is different from financial assets like stocks or bonds owned by mutual funds.
The structure is:
A sponsor (usually a developer like a power or road company) transfers assets into the Trust.
An investment manager does financial management and capital structuring and declares distributions.
A project manager operates and optimises these assets.
A trustee safeguards investor interest.
The key feature, and the real attraction, is distribution. InvITs are required to distribute at least 90 per cent of their net distributable cash flows to unit holders. In simple terms: these are yield vehicles.
Investment Rationale
InvITs solve one basic portfolio problem: how to generate predictable cash flows without taking equity-like volatility.
There are four reasons why they deserve attention:
1. Predictable Income: This is their core appeal. Cash flows in InvITs come from contracted or regulated assets, such as toll collections, transmission tariffs, and lease payments. These are not cyclical earnings in the traditional sense, which makes them closer to a high-yield bond than equity.
2. Inflation Linkage: Many infrastructure contracts have built-in escalation clause; for instance, toll rates are linked to inflation. This gives InvITs a rare characteristic: income that can keep pace with inflation, unlike in the case of fixed deposits (FDs).
3. Diversification Benefit: InvITs have low correlation to equities. They don’t move because of earnings upgrades or downgrades. Instead, they move based on interest rates, asset performance, and yield expectations.

4. Accessibility At Small Ticket Size: You can access this asset class for a small ticket size, such as one unit in the secondary market or according to your corpus. Historically, infrastructure has been a playground for sovereign funds and pension money. But InvITs democratise access. Now, retail investors can also participate in these infrastructure assets.
The macro case for InvITs is:
India is entering an infrastructure buildout cycle.
Government programs like national monetisation pipelines are feeding assets into InvIT structures.
The market itself is expected to grow significantly.
This creates a steady pipeline of new assets, including roads, renewable energy, transmission networks, that can be monetised through InvITs. In short, InvITs are becoming the financial bridge between public infrastructure needs and private capital.
How Does The Structure Work?
At the core of every InvIT is net distributable cash flow (NDCF).

InvITs And Expectations
Some of the InvITs in India are IndiaGrid Infra Trust (IndiGrid), which invests in power transmission, renewable energy and energy storage; National Highways Infra Trust (NHAI InvIT), backed by NHAI and focused on road projects; Vertis Infra Trust and Cube Highways Trust, which primarily hold road and highway assets; Energy Infrastructure Trust, which is involved in energy and gas pipeline projects; and Altius Telecom Infra Trust and NDR InvIT Trust, which operate in the telecom and warehousing sectors.
InvITs are often slotted into ‘alternatives’ for easy reference, but they behave like listed yield instruments with embedded leverage. The leverage is that they avail of funding from banks or issuance of bonds, and deploy. The market narrative tends to oversimplify them as stable income products.
The distribution is largely a function of distributable cash flow, extent of leverage (funding availed), and interest rate spreads (difference between cost of funds and earnings from assets). For instance, if cost of funding is 8 per cent and asset yield is 12 per cent, the interest spread is 4 per cent. This spread drives equity yield and distribution growth potential.
Taxation
The taxation implication is that you need to track the breakup of distributions, not just the total payouts. Fortunately, it is mentioned in the statement accompanying the distributions.
Where InvITs Fit In A Portfolio
InvITs should be seen as:
A fixed-income alternative with relatively higher risk-return, but not an equity substitute.
A cash flow generator, not a compounding machine like equity over a long period of time.
A portfolio diversifier, not a core growth allocation.
The following table will help you understand it better:

InvITs won’t outperform equities in a bull market or protect fully in case of a rate shock, but they offer visible cash flows with moderate return certainty. And in markets where most returns are narrative-driven, that kind of predictability is a feature, not a limitation.
By Joydeep Sen Corporate Trainer and Author















