Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Debt mutual funds see ₹84,202 crore outflow in Mar qtr

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NEW DELHI: Debt mutual funds witnessed an outflow of ₹84,202 crore in three months ended March 2021, with liquid schemes contributi­ng 56% of the withdrawal, according to a Morningsta­r report.

This was the only quarter in 2020-21 that saw outflow in the fixed-income or debt category.

The outflow comes following an inflow of ₹1.69 lakh crore in December quarter, ₹35,522 crore in September quarter and ₹1.09 lakh crore in June quarter.

According to the report, fixedincom­e category had faced a challengin­g atmosphere since the downgrade to IL&FS back in 2018.

A spate of downgrades to other entities following the IL&FS crisis left some of the fixed-income funds in a serious liquidity crunch as redemption­s in certain categories exploded, it added.

“Given the uncertaint­y in the economy caused by Covid-19, investors are again moving toward risk-averse assets in the fixed-income segment during volatile times, as they tend to provide better protection to their capital relative to some credit strategies,” the report noted.

The latest outflow pulled the asset base of the fixed-income category for March 2021 quarter to ₹13.28 lakh crore, which was 6% lower than the previous quarter when the total asset base was ₹14.06 lakh crore.

The liquid, ultra-short-term, money market, and overnight fund categories constitute a substantia­l portion of the total assets (about 44%) within the fixed-income category, the report said.

Given its significan­t contributi­on, even a slight change in the amount of flows in percentage terms in these segments can make a huge difference in the overall flows within the fixed-income category, it added.

Around 56% of the total outflow during the quarter under review in the fixed-income segment came through liquid funds, where most of the institutio­nal money is parked.

Liquid funds witnessed net withdrawal of ₹47,398 crore during the quarter under review typically due to advance tax payment requiremen­ts. This comes following an inflow of ₹16,270 crore.

In addition, low duration funds and short duration funds saw outflow to the tune of ₹21,044 crore and ₹12,419 crore respective­ly.

Further, banking & PSU category, which is considered as a safe option, witnessed outflow of ₹6,427 crore as opposed to receiving net flows of ₹11,500 crore in the previous quarter.

Under the Sebi rules, banking & PSU funds have to invest a minimum 80% of their total assets in debt instrument­s of banks, public sector undertakin­gs, or public financial institutio­ns. This makes the category of investment relatively safer than some of the other fixed-income categories in terms of credit risk.

 ?? MINT ?? Fixed-income category had faced a challengin­g atmosphere since the downgrade to IL&FS back in 2018.
MINT Fixed-income category had faced a challengin­g atmosphere since the downgrade to IL&FS back in 2018.

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