Khaleej Times

Equity bug bites India’s small-town investors

- Nupur Acharya and Santanu Chakrabort­y

mumbai — India’s stock market boom is fanning out to the country’s hinterland.

Flows into mutual funds from towns outside India’s 15 biggest cities surged 41 per cent to a record ₹3.1 trillion ($48 billion) at the end of March, according to the latest data from the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India. And half of this money flowed into equity funds.

Amit Goyal, a 36-year-old human resources executive from the northern city of Dehradun, embodies this trend. He began putting ₹4,000 every month into funds last year. Encouraged by the rising value of the investment­s, he has since made lump sum additions.

“Investing in equities provides me with higher returns and helps create a buffer for future expenses,” Goyal said. “Earlier, my investment­s were restricted to fixed deposits and a bit of real estate, with the rest of the money idling in a bank account.”

With the nation’s shares trading near all-time highs, the mutual fund industry is reaching into small towns through television, social media and billboards, pitching alternativ­es to bank deposits and gold. The flows have added to money managers’ heft, providing a buffer against outflows sparked by global shocks.

“We used to get 85 per cent of the money from the top 15 cities and the rest from smaller places. Now, collection­s from small towns have doubled,” said Sunil Subramania­m, CEO at Sundaram Asset Management, which oversees $4.6 billion. “Returns from other avenues have dried up, prompting small-town savers to take to mutual funds.”

Industry-wide accounts reached a record 55 million as of March 31, with 80 per cent of them in stock plans, data from AMFI show. Analysts attribute it to a mix of factors.

“A majority of new investors who come to us cite unattracti­ve returns on alternate assets as a key reason for buying funds,” Vidya Bala, head of research at FundsIndia, said. “The industry has cashed in on this by ramping its outreach programme.”

The share of flows from smaller locations is set to grow as households shift more money into financial assets. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Pedestrian­s walk past an advertisem­ent for a mutual funds campaign by the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India at a bus stop in Mumbai.
— Bloomberg Pedestrian­s walk past an advertisem­ent for a mutual funds campaign by the Associatio­n of Mutual Funds in India at a bus stop in Mumbai.

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