BusinessLine (Delhi)

Equity MF flows dip 16% in April

SIP contributi­on tops ₹20,000 cr for the first time; small-cap funds return to favour again

- Ashley Coutinho

Inflows into equity mutual funds stood at ₹18,917 crore in April, a 16 per cent drop over the previous month, data from the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) showed.

Small-cap funds, which saw outflows of ₹94 crore in March after SEBI mandated stress tests, were back on investor radar, registerin­g net inflows of ₹2,209 crore. Sectoral/thematic funds cornered 27 per cent or ₹5,166 crore of the total flows. multi-cap funds, large & midcap funds, and flexi-cap funds saw flows of over ₹2,000 crore each. Flows in large-cap funds, however, declined 83 per cent to ₹357 crore.

Equity flows were positive for the 38th consecutiv­e month. “We are seeing heightened activity towards sectoral/thematic funds. Our recommenda­tion is that diversifie­d funds would be a better bet for the long term over such funds specially when valuations are on the higher side,” said Chandrapra­kash Padiyar, Senior Fund Manager, Tata Asset Management.

KYC ISSUES

Flows via systematic investment plans, a monthly contributi­on, touched a new high of ₹20,371 crore despite KYC related issues faced by the industry last month. 93 per cent of MF accounts have KYC Validated or KYC Registered status; 3 per cent accounts have ‘KYC Hold’ status, while another 4 per cent have not done their KYC.

“The MF industry is addressing concerns for a smooth process. Together with AMCs, distributo­rs and other stake holders, we are committed to facilitati­ng a seamless KYC validation process for all, thereby ensuring the integrity and accessibil­ity of mutual fund investment­s across the board,” Venkat Chalasani, Chief Executive, AMFI.

FRONT-RUNNING ISSUE

Chalasani said AMFI had set up a committee that would create an institutio­nal framework for preventing frontrunni­ng at AMCs within a month.

Hybrid schemes received inflows of ₹19,863 crore, aided by ₹13,901 crore of inflows into arbitrage funds.

Debt-oriented schemes saw inflows of ₹1.9 lakh crore, primarily fuelled by investment­s in liquid funds, money market funds and overnight funds. Gilt funds and corporate bond funds saw flows of ₹5,210 crore and ₹2,992 crore, respective­ly.

“This surge in inflows can be attributed to factors such as quarter-end demands for advance tax, diminishin­g year-end redemption­s and continued volatility in the stock markets, leading investors to favour cash for short-term investment­s,” said Gopal Kavaliredd­i, Vice President of Research at FYERS.

In April, the number of new fund o¤erings was lower, with only 9 new schemes launched, raising a total of ₹1,532 crore. This is a decrease from March, which saw 19 schemes launched, raising ₹4,146 crore. The assets under management of the MF industry stood at ₹57.3 lakh crore at the end of April, a 7.2 per cent increase over the previous month.

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