Business Standard

Related distributo­rs breathe life into MF assets

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA

Associate distributo­rs have provided stickier assets to some of India’s largest fund houses, even as troubles in debt schemes have prompted withdrawal­s that have led to erosion i n the amount of money they manage.

The share of such distributo­rs has risen since the outbreak in March. It continued to hold even after the panic withdrawal­s prompted by Franklin Templeton’s wind-up move, according to data from the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi).

As regards the five largest asset managers, the share of such distributo­rs stood at 9.2 per cent as of end-2019. It rose to 9.5 per cent in March, when the lockdown began, and was 9.4 per cent at the end of April.

Associate distributo­rs include banks that sell their own MFS to customers. Three of the top five MFS are backed

by banks, including SBI MF, HDFC MF, and ICICI Prudential MF.

These had an average 12.5 per cent of assets coming in from associate distributo­rs.

The number is significan­tly lower for asset managers that are not backed by banks. It is just under 2 per cent for Aditya Birla Sun Life MF, and zero for Nippon India MF.

Sundeep Sikka, ED and CEO of Nippon Life India Asset Management, said garnering assets using group entities was not a problem if there was no conflict involved, and consumer interests were protected.

E-mails sent to the remaining f und houses did not receive a reply.

The largest share is for SBI MF. As much as 23.7 per cent of the total assets comes from associate distributo­rs. It is 5.3 per cent for HDFC MF and 8.5 per cent for ICICI Prudential MF.

Ramanathan Krishnamoo­rthy, founder and CEO of Spectrum Wealth Solutions, said garnering assets from group firms was no issue if the funds are performing well.

The top five MFS witnessed significan­t decline in assets when the equity markets tanked and debt funds saw withdrawal­s. Total assets dropped from ~15.7 trillion in December 2019 to ~13.8 trillion in April 2020.

 ??  ?? Dec ‘19 Jan ‘20 Source: Amfi, Business Standard calculatio­ns
Dec ‘19 Jan ‘20 Source: Amfi, Business Standard calculatio­ns

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