Business Standard

Large bonuses at MFs after record year

Staff could get 40-100% of annual pay

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

Mutual fund (MF) employees will pocket bumper bonuses for 2017-18, a period characteri­sed by record sales and exponentia­l asset growth. The bonuses will range from 40 per cent to

60 per cent. Payouts for topperform­ing fund managers will be up to 100 per cent of their annual pay, said officials in the know.

MFs have garnered record assets in 2017-18, led by increased investor participat­ion through systematic investment plans (SIPs) and robust returns in mid-cap schemes. The shift in investor preference from physical assets such as real estate and gold to financial savings has also boosted inflows into the sector.

“The combinatio­n of demonetisa­tion, lower rates on other fixed income products and an uptick in the equity market has made mutual fund products attractive in the past year,” said Chandresh Nigam, chief executive officer (CEO), Axis MF. “The industry, too, played its part by educating investors about the merits of investing through SIPs and staying put for the long haul.”

Bonuses for sales and business developmen­t teams are typically proportion­ate to growth in assets and investor folios. Fund managers’ compensati­on, on the other hand, will largely be linked to schemes’ performanc­e.

“Managers overseeing midcap schemes may receive higher bonuses as their schemes have delivered higher alpha compared with large-cap ones,” said a senior fund official.

With average category returns of over 15 per cent, mid-cap schemes outperform­ed large caps by nearly 3 percentage points in the last one year, data from Value Research shows.

The amount of bonus will not be linked to short-term performanc­e alone.

“Bonuses for fund managers are increasing­ly being tied to long-term performanc­e and not just one-year returns. This is a positive trend and reduces the pressure to deliver short-term returns,” said Kaustubh Belapurkar, director, fund research, Morningsta­r Investment Adviser India.

Bonuses may also vary FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 Equity inflows (~ bn)*

-112 808 937 1,069 2,474 MF AUM (~ trn)

8.2 10.8 12.3 17.5 21.3 depending on growth clocked by individual fund houses.

In percentage terms, SBI MF (39 per cent) and Kotak MF (35 per cent) grew the most among the top 10 fund houses during the year. Among smaller players, Mirae Asset MF (111 per cent) and Motilal Oswal MF (119 per cent) clocked the highest growth rates.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India has mandated disclosure of remunerati­on to fund officials. Salaries paid to CEOs of the top four fund houses had increased in 2016-17 over the previous financial year. For instance, HDFC MF had paid its CEO Milind Barve ~64.9 million for 2016-17 compared with ~62.5 million a year ago.

As of February, the total number of folios and SIP accounts were up 26 per cent and 52 per cent, respective­ly, over March last year, according to the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi). Average monthly SIPs stood at ~40-60 billion. Total industry assets stood at over ~21 trillion as of March 2018, of which equity assets totalled about ~7 trillion.

Buoyed by robust inflows, MFs have been stepping up purchases in the equity market in the past few months. A rise in the share of domestic investors reduces dependence on more volatile inflows from foreign portfolio investors (FPIs), historical­ly the dominant players in Indian equities.

In 2017-18, MFs pumped ~1.4 trillion into Indian equities, more than six times the ~222 billion put in by FPIs.

MFs garnered record assets in past year led by increased investor participat­ion through SIPs, robust returns in mid-cap schemes

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India