Of the total net investments of Rs 89,000 cr till Sept, fund managers moved a little over Rs 11,300 cr in new listings
Fund managers have increased their quantum of investments in the top 10 by 43% so far in 2017 to Rs 1.52 lakh crore, from Rs 1.06 lakh crore
Mutual funds (MFs) have dropped the pace of buying amid the benchmark indices touching record highs in May.According to statistics from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), fund managers collectively invested Rs 8,959 crore in May, a fifth less than the Rs 11,244 crore in April.The investment figure last month was, however, much more than the average monthly investment of Rs 6,350 crore for 2017 so far. Some fund managers were taking money off the table as stocks climbed to record levels, resulting in lower investment tally."Markets on the index level are high enough to make us re-look at our stock picks. There is certainly a mismatch between market expectations and ground developments. The margin of safety has taken a hit. Capital expenditure and earnings are not rising as we had been expecting. We are cautious and risk-adjustment against returns is a top priority at such times, while concentrating on a few large companies," says the chief investment officer of one of ..
Amid a gush of liquidity, equity fund managers have been doing a lot of timely stock buying, while faring less well in sale of holdings.The year started with the most buying in Infosys, the favourite information technology stock of fund managers. However, they took a sell call on peer Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). The following month, the latter rallied 11 per cent and Infosys by nine per cent.Fund managers' sell call on Axis Bank, Grasim Industries and HDFC Bank did not turn out well. All these counters gained quite a lot. Rather, on Axis and Grasim, fund managers continuously failed with their sell calls. They soon reversed strategy on HDFC Bank and after selling the counter in February, infused nearly double the amount. On an aggregate level, of the 20 buy calls taken during January-April (tracking the five most bought stocks per month), 16 of these rewarded the fund managers; only four went wrong in the short term. But, of 20 selling decisions, they proved wrong on 13 ...
With strong domestic inflows continuing as Indian shares hover at all-time highs, equity fund managers are increasingly taking the precaution of keeping a higher amount of cash.Recent data shows the cash component against total equity assets under management (AUM) a little over 6.5 per cent, a multi-year high. A year before, the cash position did not exceed four percentage points.Unreasonably high valuations in the mid-cap and small-cap space are making fund managers wary and they've been cashing out from those positions. Since November, when demonetisation was announced, there's been a problem in deploying these, resulting in a continuous rise in the cash component. "At any point of time, I have to be sensitive to the risks involved while generating returns for investors. I can't afford to go reckless with investor money at a time when expectations are too high to manage. Efforts are being made to shift as much assets into giants of the sectors, such as L&T, Tata Motors, ICICI ...
The strong inflows have pushed the asset base of equity mutual funds by 5% in April
However, fund houses are upbeat about the industry's performance in the new financial year
Growing participation from retail investors, huge inflow in equity schemes increased the folio count
Domestic investors continue to invest despite the markets climbing to record levels
SIPs keep MFs afloat as investors redeem Rs 1.3 lakh crore in one year
ICICI Pru MF, the largest fund house, has raised this to 12%; sectoral level at 5%, from 3.8% in Nov, showing cautious stance
This marks the 10th straight month of inflows into equity schemes
At the start of 2016, HDFC Bank, Infosys, ICICI Bank, L&T and Axis Bank were the top five picks
Experts say correction in the stock prices from their September highs spurred investor buying
The retail-investor-focused equity segment's AUM has nearly doubled in two years to Rs 4.5 lakh crore at the end of July
Market experts attributed the rise in the inflow to investments in SIPs and strong participation from retail investors
Returns by several most-preferred equity mutual fund schemes could not keep pace with what the humble recurring deposit offered investors
Investors pullout Rs 1,370 cr in March from equity schemes
The average monthly inflows in the second half of the financial year have been around Rs 4,300 cr compared to Rs 8,000 cr in the first half