Business Standard

Debt MFS vulnerable to large exits: Report

- JASH KRIPLANI

The FSR report has highlighte­d that debt mutual funds (MFS) remain susceptibl­e to exits from large-ticket investors, even as regulation­s have placed caps on single-investor holding in schemes to avoid concentrat­ion.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) Financial Stability Report (FSR) has highlighte­d that debt mutual funds (MFS) remain susceptibl­e to exits from large-ticket investors, even as regulation­s have placed caps on single-investor holding in schemes to avoid concentrat­ion.

“Existing regulation­s specify single-investor concentrat­ion norms for diversifyi­ng the investor base. However, when the investor profile is dominated by risk-averse investors, as is the case in money market/debt MFS, there is a strong possibilit­y of a few corporatio­ns distributi­ng their surplus to over fourfive fund houses, and hence, exits during times of stress could still be concerted,” RBI observed in its 21st issue of the FSR.

The existing regulation­s by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) state that no single investor can hold more than 25 per cent of the corpus of an MF scheme.

Pointing out the risks seen during the pandemic, the FSR noted that high returns had “quickly turned negative in the wake of Covid-19-related dislocatio­n”.

The report also pointed out that the chase for returns ends up masking the illiquidit­y premium in debt schemes, as higher returns attract incrementa­l investor flows.

Further, the report stated that corporate investors are concentrat­ed in large-sized schemes as smaller fund houses are unable to compete on expense ratios because of lower economies of scale.

There is also a higher likelihood of bailout. "A large fund size is also incentive compatible from an investor point of view, as such funds have significan­t systemic spillovers, potentiall­y improving possibilit­ies of bailouts”.

The high share of corporate and high-net worth investors (HNIS) in debt funds make them more vulnerable to large exits.

The report pointed out that corporate investors and HNIS accounted for 90 per cent of the aggregate assets under management in debt funds.

The report observed that debt funds’ risk-aversion has continued.

“The proportion of liquid securities in holdings of debt MFS reached an all-time high in April 2020, reflecting risk aversion and liquidity storing,” the report pointed out.

Corporate defaults have taken a toll on debt MFS.

“Resource mobilisati­on by MFS suffered from idiosyncra­tic shocks such as corporate defaults during the second half of 2019 -20, with pressure intensifyi­ng in March 2020. Open-ended debt-oriented schemes accounted for net outflows of ~1.94 trillion,” the report said.

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