Business Standard

HDFC MF to join IPO bandwagon

Second-biggest fund house begins talks to go public

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

HDFC Mutual Fund, the country’s second-largest money manager, has joined the list of probable asset management companies (AMCs) waiting to go public.

The AMC has begun preliminar­y discussion­s to list itself on the bourses but is yet to arrive at a time frame or appoint merchant bankers for the share sale, said two people familiar with the matter.

HDFC MF began operating as an AMC in July 2000 and is sponsored by the Housing Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n (HDFC) and Standard Life Investment­s. The former holds 59.9 per cent stake while the latter has 39.9 per cent share in the AMC.

There aren’t any big pure-play mutual funds listed at this point in time and an initial public offering (IPO) will allow investors to directly participat­e in the growth of the industry, say experts. Reliance Nippon Life Asset Management and UTI MF are the two other AMCs in the race to go public. The former has set a March 2018 deadline for its share sale and has filed its offer document with the regulator.

“This is a good time for AMCs to go public,” said Manoj Nagpal, chief executive officer (CEO), Outlook Asia Capital. “The assets of the sector have grown at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 25-30 per cent in the past three years, and the profits of large-sized fund houses are expected to grow at a fast clip as assets swell and fixed costs remain the same.”

“HDFC MF does not need the money to run the AMC business per se, but an IPO will help the promoters and key employees to monetise their stake,” said the chief executive of a fund house, who wished to remain anonymous.

An email sent to HDFC MF and HDFC Ltd did not elicit a response.

If it decides to list, the fund house will command a premium on account of its brand name and its track record of consistent­ly being one of the most profitable AMCs in the country, said experts. The AMC clocked a net profit of ~550 crore in FY17 and ~478 crore the year before.

At the end of August, the fund house had assets of more than ~2.7 lakh crore, second only to that of ICICI Prudential AMC. A high percentage of these are equity assets, considered stickier than debt assets as the bulk of the equity money comes from retail and wealthy investors. HDFC MF’s equity assets totalled in excess of ~1 lakh crore as of August 31, forming nearly 40 per cent of its asset base.

Fund houses are typically valued at three per cent of their debt assets and six per cent of their equity assets. HDFC MF could get a valuation of at least six per cent of its overall assets. This could value the fund house at upwards of ~16,000 crore. Reliance MF’s IPO size is reportedly pegged between ~1,800 crore and ~2,000 crore, valuing the AMC at about ~20,000 crore.

“The valuations for AMCs may not look cheap at present but it makes sense for investors to own these stocks from a long-term perspectiv­e. Indian MFs’ share as a percentage of financial savings is 3.5 per cent while the global average is around 40-50 per cent. That itself hints at the potential for growth,” said Feroze Azeez, deputy CEO, Anand Rathi Private Wealth Management.

 ??  ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON AJAY MOHANTY
ILLUSTRATI­ON AJAY MOHANTY

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