The Indian mutual fund industry saw fall of over 4.35% in
its average assets under management (AAUM) for the October-December quarter
following a lack of participation from retail investors.
According to data from the Association of Mutual Funds in
India (AMFI), the total AAUM of 44 fund houses at the end of the
October-December quarter stood at R6,817,07.83 crore, a fall of R31,033.89
crore against R7,127,41.73 crore for the July-September quarter.
HDFC Mutual Fund continued to retain its number one slot
with an AAUM of over R88,628.02 crore. However, its AAUM for the December
quarter was down by 3.48% against that in the previous quarter.
According to Crisil, as many as 24 out of 44 fund houses
logged a fall in the average AAUM in the December quarter with Reliance Mutual
Fund registering the highest fall in average AAUM in absolute terms by around
R8,354.79 crore or 9.22% toR82,305.80 crore in the December quarter.
SBI Mutual Fund saw its average AUM falling by nearly
R6,179.88 crore or 12.95% to R41,551.51 crore in the latest quarter. In
percentage terms, Union KBC Mutual Fund saw the highest fall at around 37.87%
to end with assets of R54,015 crore.
Among gainers, JP Morgan Mutual Fund registered the highest
growth in average AUM, with its AUM rising R2,011.02 crore or 42.36% in the
quarter to R 6,758.71 crore.
Deepak Chatterjee MD and CEO of SBI MF says, “Overall, the
trend in the assets is declining, which is very dissatisfying and distressing.
Also there is no fresh money flowing into the equity schemes , following weak
equity markets. We are witnessing some growth on fixed income side, where
retail investors are coming in fixed maturity plans (FMPs), but in the last few
months they have remained out of equity funds.”
Crisil in its reports also states that mutual funds AAUM was
down by 4.4% in Q42011 on withdrawals by corporates, banks and weak equities.
The fall can be attributed to redemption by corporates and banks besides the
ongoing slide in the equity market.
“Corporate withdrawals were on account of quarter-end
advance tax payments, which were reported at around R30,000-40,000 crore for
the December quarter, much lower than R68,000 crore in the September quarter.
As per inflow-outflow trends seen in the past, corporates typically reverse
these outflows in the month following the quarter end,” says Crisil report.
The report further adds “Banks withdrew due to two reasons;
on account of balance sheet capital adequacy requirements for the quarter end
and secondly due to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular to reduce banks’
exposure to short maturity mutual funds to 10% of their net worth by
end-January 2012.
Banks’ investment in mutual funds fell to R49,300 crore as
on December 16, 2011 as compared to R65,800 crore as on September 23, 2011.”
Source: http://www.financialexpress.com/news/mutual-funds-aaum-falls-4.35-in-q3/895878/0
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