Business Standard

Sovereign funds go slow on India investment­s

Share of FPI investment­s has dropped in recent years

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA Mumbai, 11 July

Some of India’s largest foreign investors are showing signs of increasing reticence. Sovereign wealth funds' stock market bets were worth ~1.5 trillion, according to latest depository data as of May 2018. This is lower than the previous year, and reflects half-atrillion drop from two years ago. SACHIN P MAMPATTA writes

Some of India’s largest foreign investors are showing signs of increasing reticence.

Sovereign wealth funds’ stock market bets were worth ~1.5 trillion, according to latest depository data as of May 2018. This is lower than the previous year, and reflects half-a-trillion drop from two years ago.

Meanwhile, overall foreign portfolio investment­s rose by over ~7.4 trillion from May 2016. Sovereign wealth funds’ share of foreign investment­s has dropped to 5.4 per cent in May 2018 from 10.9 per cent share in May 2016.

A sovereign wealth fund is owned by the government. It accumulate­s and invests money in various asset classes to meet the country’s future needs, such as retirement benefits for an aging population. They have emerged as a significan­t source of equity capital across the world, and are one of the top five categories of foreign investors in Indian equities. These investment­s are seen to be more stable than other sources of capital due to their long-term investment outlook.

West Asian sovereign wealth funds have already been withdrawin­g capital following the volatility in crude oil prices over recent years, according to a domestic brokerage executive who handled institutio­nal broking. Domestic institutio­ns have helped absorb the selling.

Mutual funds saw net inflows of ~82.4 billion in June 2018, according to data from the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India, including inflows into arbitrage funds and tax-saving equity schemes. This is higher than the average foreign portfolio outflows of ~10.7 billion a month in the first six months of 2018.

The effect on Indian equities in light of outflows should be limited so long as selling was in line with this recent trend, said UR Bhat, managing director, Dalton Capital Advisors (India). But there is a risk that sovereign wealth funds will see more selling. Reuterscit­ed asset manager Invesco’s annual survey of sovereign investors and managers of central bank reserves, noting that over a third of sovereign investors were looking to reduce asset allocation­s to equity. High equity valuations and fears of a trade war are the reasons cited for reasons to cut equity holding.

Indian markets are trading above historical valuations, said Tirthankar Patnaik, chief strategist and head of research, India, Mizuho Bank. Emerging markets begin to look risky during a trade war scenario. Rising interest rates mean debt begins to look more attractive than equity.

“For a sovereign wealth fund, equities in general were expensive,” he added.

Some improvemen­t in earnings is expected for India. A June 2018 Motilal Oswal Securities India Strategy report noted that markets would see better earnings, but markets would remain under pressure. “We expect FY19 to herald the earnings recovery for India, although the market will remain distracted by global and local macro events such as the ongoing global trade war, US Fed rate increase cycle, potential moderation in domestic equity flows and political developmen­ts,” according to the report.

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