Business Standard

SIP closures surge on volatility

One out of every three applicatio­ns is for terminatio­n of plan as sentiment takes a hit

- JASH KRIPLANI Mumbai, 20 September

Investors are turning cautious on investing in mutual funds (MFs), as rising volatility in the market dampens sentiment. Besides a slowdown in equity inflows, closure of systematic investment plans (SIPs) is also on the rise.

According to industry data, for every three SIP applicatio­ns this fiscal year, at least one was for stopping the plan. In contrast, for the large part of the previous fiscal year, the ratio of fresh applicatio­ns to closure requests was around five-to-one.

The trend could be worrying given these monthly investment plans are widely seen as a strong structural driver for future growth of the ~25-trillion MF industry. Unlike lump sum money, SIP flows tend to be stickier and so their growth helps in offsetting cyclical risks.

The increase in closure of SIP accounts can be closely correlated with the increase in volatility and meltdown in small- and mid-cap stocks.

“Lot of money chasing high returns had recently moved into mid- and small-cap schemes. The mis-match between investor expectatio­ns and returns led to some pre-mature closures. During 2008, closures were much higher as negative returns had extended over a much longer timeframe,” said Swarup Mohanty, chief executive officer of Mirae AMC.

Advisors say investors who recently entered markets are finding it difficult to deal with the sharp spike in volatility.

“Investors in mid- and small-cap schemes were seeing robust returns but have become concerned recently as returns are fading away fast. First-time investors are also pulling out as they didn’t expect to see negative returns,” said Srikanth Matrubhai, a Bengalurub­ased MF distributo­r and advisor.

According to data from Value Research, SIP returns on small-cap schemes are down more than 12 per cent over the last one-year period, while those for mid-cap funds are down four per cent.

Advisors, however, believe SIP investors would be better off staying put. “When market goes through such correction­s, SIPs also bring down the average cost of investment­s. As and when conditions improve, mid- and small-cap schemes could see a sharper recovery,” said Vidya Bala, head of MF research, FundsIndia.

Fund managers are also seeing investment opportunit­ies amid the correction. “The entire small-cap space has corrected. While the small-cap index is down 12-13 per cent, a few stocks have corrected much more. Amid this fall, we see pockets of opportunit­ies. While these may not be extremely cheap, they are still reasonable. The earnings cycle also seems to be picking up for these companies,” said Vinit Sambre, head (equities) at DSP Investment Managers.

Small-cap schemes, which had imposed limits on investor inflows amid surging valuations, have started easing some of these restrictio­ns. For instance, DSP MF opened the DSP Small Cap Fund for subscripti­on through SIPs and systematic transfer plans (STPs) in the first week of September.

In August, SIP contributi­on to the industry stood at ~76 billion; growing at 48 per cent CAGR over the last 2 years.

Analysts at Nomura estimate that flows through SIPs contribute­d to 10 per cent of equity assets. “We think increasing share of MFs in financial savings is a structural story and has become a mainstream investment mode, with SIPs on the rise... while there may be cyclicalit­y risk in the lump sum equity investment ... we think the product (SIPs) continues to be most cost competitiv­e, amid improving distributi­on,” said Nomura analysts in a note.

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