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HomeEconomyIndian equity funds hit a 5-month high, spur risk appetite

Indian equity funds hit a 5-month high, spur risk appetite

Indian equities posted their best month in three years in March as foreign investors plowed more than $6 billion into the market on the prospect of PM Modi winning a second term.

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Mumbai: Flows into Indian equity mutual funds hit a five-month high in March, induced by the rally that recently lifted the $2.2 trillion stock market to a record.

Stock funds took in about 118 billion rupees ($1.7 billion), the highest since October, and more than double over the previous month, data from the Association of Mutual Funds in India, or AMFI, show.

Indian equities posted their best month in three years in March as foreign investors plowed more than $6 billion — the most since September 2010 — on the prospect of Prime Minister Narendra Modi winning a second term in elections starting this week and as a dovish shift by global central banks revived demand for riskier assets.

“Volatility has come down a little and markets have shown a bit of an uptrend, all of which rubbed off on mutual-fund flows,” N. S. Venkatesh, chief executive officer at AMFI, said in a conference call on Monday. “The sentiment is positive.”

Robust liquidity from domestic institutional investors have helped buffer the market against outflows sparked by global shocks in recent years. This backstop had weakened following a drop in flows to equity plans for four months through February. Mutual fund and insurance firms yanked out a combined 139.3 billion rupees from shares last month, the most in three years, even as India emerged as Asia’s top destination for overseas money this year.

Insights

Total assets rose three percent month-on-month to 23.8 trillion rupees. Money-market funds witnessed outflows of 513.4 billion rupees in March, the most since December, typically seen at end of quarter and fiscal year. Debt funds saw an inflow of 139 billion rupees, while balanced funds suffered an outflow of 31.8 billion rupees, the AMFI data show.


Also read: India is a self-correcting country, the bad-loan crisis shows that, says Edelweiss’ Rashesh Shah


 

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