Business Standard

Mutual funds prune exposure to tech stocks TURNING BEARISH

Sell shares worth ~1,550 crore in firms during March

- CHANDAN KISHORE KANT Mumbai, 17 April

Tepid growth outlook and new headwinds such as rupee appreciati­on have made mutual fund (MF) managers wary of the informatio­n technology (IT) sector.

Money managers, who have already been underweigh­t on the sector, were seen further pruning their exposure to the country’s top IT stocks. Last month, investment managers liquidated shares worth ~1,550 crore in IT companies. The stand was vindicated after IT bellwether Infosys had a tepid March quarter and disappoint­ed with its revenue guidance.

Fund managers have turned bearish on the IT pack due to multiple headwinds such as stricter US visa policy, lower order flows, and sharp appreciati­on in the rupee.

Wipro emerged as the most-sold stock, with fund managers offloading nearly eight million shares worth ~403 crore. It was followed by Tech Mahindra (~389 crore), Tata Consultanc­y Services (~305 crore) and Infosys (~275 crore).

India’s largest fund house ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund took an aggressive call to cut exposure to Infosys. The fund house sold its shares worth ~580 crore. On the other hand, HDFC Mutual Fund’s major reduction in the sector was HCL Technology as it sold shares worth ~200 crore. Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund reduced its allocation to Tata Consultanc­y Services and IT stocks’ sell-off by mutual funds in March liquidated shares worth ~113 crore. Interestin­gly, Reliance Nippon Mutual Fund added more of HCL Technology shares worth ~167 crore during March.

Neelesh Surana, equity head at Mirae Asset Mutual Fund, says, “We have been underweigh­t on IT for nearly two years now. The growth trajectory for the sector is coming down and recent rupee movement is not favouring the sector at large. At current times, they have slipped to a level where it appears further big downside is protected. Some IT counters may trigger buying interest at these levels.”

Shares of all the top IT majors are trading 10-30 per cent lower than their 52-week high. Infosys and Tech Mahindra are hit the worst as their shares have plunged 28 per cent and 25 per cent, respective­ly, against their oneyear high.

“With the exception of Infosys, equity MFs don’t have substantia­l exposure to the IT sector. Recent selling is more of a directiona­l than a strategic call for many of us,” explains chief investment officer (CIO) of a mid-sized fund house. “Cautious view continues on IT sector. Issues of H1B visa and weak order flows have been discounted in the prices. However, the sudden strength in the rupee may not be priced in fully. There may not be immediate uptick in growth prospects for IT companies. Doubt remains if the domestic IT leaders will sustain their position on the global map given the fastchangi­ng scenario. Higher payout may not help battle the weak investor sentiment,” said Ambareesh Baliga, an independen­t market expert.

This year, the IT index is down 10 per cent even as the benchmark Sensex has rallied 10 per cent.

Tepid growth outlook and new headwinds such as rupee appreciati­on have made funds wary of informatio­n technology sector

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