Business Standard

Limited competitio­n in MFs irks Sebi

Top 10 fund houses have 81% AUMs; Ajay Tyagi calls for reforms to boost competitio­n in the sector

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has expressed concerns over few mutual fund houses dominating the ~23-trillion, domestic asset management industry.

According to data, the top 10 fund houses account for 81 per cent of the total assets under management (AUMs). The top-five players account for almost 57 per cent of the assets.

“It is a major cause of concern that despite such tremendous growth, a majority of the market share of the industry remains concentrat­ed with a few big players,” said Ajay Tyagi, chairman, Sebi, calling for measures to “facilitate healthy competitio­n”.

He was speaking at the MF Summit 2018, organised by industry body, the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds of India (Amfi). Not just assets but a few players have disproport­ionately high profits and revenue share.

“The share of revenue of seven large AMCs is more than 60 per cent of the total industry revenue. Profit margins of large MFs have also stood at a very healthy 40-50 per cent,” said Tyagi.

The Sebi chief asked industry players whether high total expense ratio (TER) was a reason behind this trend. The TER is a percentage of a scheme’s corpus that a mutual fund house charges towards expenses, including administra­tion and management.

“The concept of the TER started in the late-90s, when AUM was ~500 billion. Today, it is ~23 trillion. Therefore, some elements are needed and we are examining the need for rationalis­ation,” he said.

Tyagi also stressed upon corporate governance lapses at the fund houses. “Some recent cases do not augur well with the public service character of the industry and have to be avoided at all costs. An arm’slength relationsh­ip with respect to related party investment­s as also avoiding conflict of interest is the need of the hour,” he added.

On the issue of ICICI Prudential MF’s investment in sister concern, ICICI Securities, Tyagi said, “We expect industry to be matured enough to discourage such practices.”

The Sebi chief cautioned the MF industry over debt investment­s. He said fund managers need to be vigilant while holding debt instrument­s and should appropriat­ely value the credit risk in their books.

“Mutual fund managers have to be cautious of credit risk even as a bulk of the money comes from institutio­nal investors, with almost ~11.5 trillion coming from non-retail investors, out of ~12.3 trillion AUMs at debt funds,” he said.

Tyagi said AUMs in the industry are just 11 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) as compared to the global average of 62 per cent. “The fund industry in India has a lot of catching up to do and there are a lot of opportunit­ies for growth,” said Tyagi.

Industry experts said Sebi can prescribe certain measures to reduce concentrat­ion of risk.

“Greater competitio­n is always in investors’ interest. There is obviously a big share of some fund houses, mainly aided by their group company’s banks being their main distributo­rs. Misselling and oversellin­g is a resultant bane,” said Prithvi Haldea, founder, Prime Database.

Tyagi also said that the regulator will soon come out with policy on close-ended funds. The market regulator is of the view that such schemes are more prone to mis-selling.

 ?? PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR ?? Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi (left) with HDFC chairman Deepak Parkeh at Amfi’s MF Summit 2018, in Mumbai on Thursday
PHOTO: KAMLESH PEDNEKAR Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi (left) with HDFC chairman Deepak Parkeh at Amfi’s MF Summit 2018, in Mumbai on Thursday
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