Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Inflows into equity MFs plunge in April

- Nasrin Sultana nasrin.s@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Net inflows into equity mutual funds slumped in April as widening business and mobility restrictio­ns dampened sentiment and prompted investors to hold on to cash.

Data released by the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi) on Tuesday showed net inflows fell 75% to ₹1,783 crore in April from ₹7,376 crore in March. Before March, the equity segment saw net outflows for eight straight months. In April last year, equity schemes received net inflows of ₹6,108.3 crore as the market crash following the abrupt nationwide lockdown made valuations attractive for investors.

Most equity fund categories received net inflows in April, except multi-cap funds, dividend yield funds, value/contra funds and ELSS funds. Categories that received significan­t flows were mid-cap, large and mid-cap and large-cap.

According to Himanshu Srivastava, associate director, manager research, Morningsta­r India, while redemption­s in April were almost the same as in March, funds mobilised were lower, suggesting some investors would have preferred to wait for clarity as a vicious second Covid wave sweeps across the country.

“Additional­ly, a few investors would have also held back investment­s in anticipati­on of a market correction, given the ongoing concerns. Volatility and intermitte­nt correction­s on concerns over the intense second wave of the pandemic and its possible impact on the economy provided investors with a good investment opportunit­y or entry points during the month,” he said.

Domestic institutio­nal investors (DIIs) have been steadily buying shares in March and April, while foreign institutio­nal investors dumped Indian equities. DIIs, which include mutual funds, insurance firms, banks, financial institutio­ns and pension funds, were net buyers of equities worth ₹11,088.62 crore in April and ₹5,204.42 crore in March.

DP Singh, chief business officer, SBI Mutual Fund, said lockdown-like curbs in cities that contribute largely to mutual fund inflows hit fresh fund deployment in the retail segment. “In a situation where there are restrictio­ns on mobility amid a health crisis, mutual fund investment­s are not a priority. The flow is likely to stay muted as long as the curbs are not lifted and the situation is not normalized. With distributo­rs getting impacted and infected due to Covid, there is less activity on the ground to drive MF investment­s,” he said.

The contributi­on of monthly systematic investment plans (SIP) declined marginally to ₹8,590.89 crore in April from ₹9,182.42 crore in March. NS Venkatesh, chief executive, Amfi, said there was a spillover of SIP money into March due to public holidays in February.

“The start to 2021-22 has been quite positive with mutual fund industry average assets under management (AUMs) climbing to an all-time high at ₹32.42 lakh crore owing to overall positive flows in all open-ended categories,” Venkatesh said.

Debt-oriented categories received a healthy net inflow of ₹1 lakh crore in April, following a net outflow of ₹52,528 crore in March. Liquid funds received significan­t inflows, indicating businesses would have chosen to park excess short-term money in these funds at the beginning of the new fiscal, Morningsta­r’s Srivastava said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The contributi­on of monthly systematic investment plans (SIP) declined marginally to ₹8,590.89 crore in April from ₹9,182.42 crore in March.
BLOOMBERG The contributi­on of monthly systematic investment plans (SIP) declined marginally to ₹8,590.89 crore in April from ₹9,182.42 crore in March.

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