Indian Mutual Fund industry suffered a major jolt at the concluding month of fiscal year 2009-10. The Asset Under Management (AUM) for the month of March stands at Rs. 6,13,979 crore, a loss of Rs. 1,52,890 crore or 19.94 per cent over its last month figures. The industry saw a net outflow of Rs. 1,52,890 crore against a gain of Rs. 6,365 in the month of Feb. The Income category saw a maximum outflow of Rs. 1,64,487 crore or a loss of 34.57 per cent. Last month, this category had seen a net inflow of Rs. 4,887 crore. However, the Liquid/Money Market category has shown an improvement over its last month figures. The current month saw a net inflow of Rs. 3,971 crore. In Income Fund category, there have been net outflow as the banks have redeemed their investments from Mutual Funds following strict directives from RBI and SEBI. The major surge in Mutual Fund Industry AUM has been happening due to increased participation from banks. They have been keeping their surplus money with Mutual Funds as the credit off-take has been slow following the bleak economic. However, in the month of March, banks have reduced their Mutual Fund positions from Rs. 1,09,453 crore as on Feb 26, 2010 to Rs. 55,502 crore as on Mar 2010. In March 2009, the banks have total investments of Rs. 36,781 crore in instruments issued by Mutual Funds. Last year in Dec 2009, RBI issued a directive to all banks after banks increased their total investments in Mutual Funds to Rs. 1,69,236 crore. RBI argued that the money invested in Mutual Funds have been revolving in the system in the form of Certificate of Deposits (CDs) which banks have been placing with Mutual Funds. The category added three new income fund schemes. JP Morgan India Short Term Income Fund and Sundaram BNP Paribas Monthly Income Plan – Conservative & Aggressive were new schemes added.
On the other front, the Equity category AUM rose to Rs. 1,74,054 crore in Mar 2010 in comparison to Rs. 1,68,672 crore recorded last month, up by 3.19 per cent. However, in terms of total flows, it saw a net outflow of Rs. 2,016 crore. In the month of March, Fund Managers booked profits seeing stretched valuations of stock market. Moreover, they also distributed dividends rampantly. SEBI also banned the dividend distribution out of Unit Premium Reserve (UPR). It said that the dividend distribution amount must be from the profits booked by the scheme. Since the ban of entry loads, equity category has seen a constant outflow of its assets. However, the first two months of 2010 had seen some inflows. In fiscal year 2009-10, the equity category has seen a net inflow of Rs. 595 crore only. However, the overall Mutual Fund AUM has grown 47.13 per cent in FY 2009-10. Bharti AXA Focussed Infrastructure collected Rs. 41 crore from its NFO.
The ELSS category saw its maximum inflow in last 15 months. The category added Rs. 641 crore to its kitty. The inflows had been mainly due to tax-season month where investors put their money in ELSS to get tax rebate under Sec 80C of Income Tax Act 1961. It saw a total inflow of Rs. 1,554 crore in last one year.
The ETF category saw some major outflows in other ETFs category. While Gold ETF added Rs. 45 crore to its kitty, other ETFs category saw an outflow of Rs. 439 crore. Current the total AUM stands Rs. 957 crore, a loss of 28.69 per cent over its last month figures. Two ETFs were added to the category. Religare Gold ETF garnered Rs. 19 crore in its NFO period while Hang Seng Benchmark Exchange Traded Scheme added Rs. 55 crore from its NFO. Hang Seng ETF is the first international ETF being launched in India by Benchmark Mutual Fund.
Gilts saw a net inflow of Rs. 267 crore. Its AUM rose to Rs. 3,395 crore in the month of March 2010, a gain of 7.06 per cent over its last month figure. Given high borrowing programme, bond yields are poised to rise further. The category may saw some inflows in the months to come once the benchmark yield level reaches to 8.25 per cent to 8.5 per cent.
The industry also saw a herd of FMPs in the month of March 2010. A total of 69 schemes were launched which collectively garnered Rs. 14,642 crore. FMPs have seen a comeback after a brief lull. March sees the maximum numbers of new NFOs in FMP category as these products are launched mainly to avail the double indexation benefit, thus, minimizing the tax burden to investors on income earned.
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