Mutual funds put in record ₹1.88-lakh cr in equities in FY24
Mutual funds have pumped in ₹1.88-lakh crore into equities in 2023-24, 8 per cent higher than the previous year and double the money put into equities five years ago.
This compares with the ₹2.08-lakh crore put in by foreign portfolio investors in FY24. Steady flows from domestic institutional investors have increasingly supported the market in the past few years. Equity schemes saw ₹1.58-lakh crore by way of net flows in FY24 (excluding March). This is higher than all other years except FY18 when flows stood at ₹1.69 lakh crore.
“The build up of equity culture in the country and the conversion of savers to investors has contributed to the rise in inflows into equity schemes in the past few years,” said DP Singh, Deputy CEO, SBI MF.
SMIDs turn star
The bulk of the MF flows in FY24 have come into small- and mid-cap (SMID) thematic and multi-cap schemes as equities hit fresh highs.
Experts say that about 40 per cent of equity flows in the past two years have gone to small and mid-cap funds. The net AUM of open-ended small cap schemes grew by 89 per cent year-on-year to ₹2.49-lakh crore, as on February 29. Meanwhile, the assets of mid-cap schemes rose 61 per cent to ₹2.96-lakh crore in the same period.
“Post Covid, the portfolio numbers have multiplied manifold, with an increasing number of young people investing through mutual funds. In the past two years, there has been a departure in the risk profile of an average investor in the ownership of small and midcap schemes as investors have been chasing returns,” said Swarup Mohanty, CEO, Mirae Asset MF.
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The monthly SIP book remained robust at ₹14,000-15,000 crore for the past year. Equity assets now form about 42 per cent of overall MF assets. This figure was about 30 per cent five years ago.
“Two years ago, most of the inflows came into hybrid categories. The equity market has given decent returns in the past two years. That combined with the higher risk appetite among investors, the adverse taxation of debt funds and financialisation of savings have resulted in higher inflows into equity schemes in FY24. Sixty-seventy per cent of the inflows has been through systematic investment plans,” said Niranjan Avasthi, Head – Product, Marketing and Digital of Edelweiss Asset Management.
SEBI had recently mandated routine stress tests to be conducted on small and mid-cap funds to highlight the potential liquidity risk associated with these funds when the markets come under pressure. Some funds have imposed restrictions on the inflows and exits. As a result, these schemes are likely to see lower inflows in March, said industry officials.
The share of domestic mutual funds in companies listed on NSE rose to an all-time high of 8.81 per cent as on December 31 last year, led by robust net inflows, according to primeinfobase.com.