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Flows to India Stock Funds Dwindle as Investors Hold Back

Inflows into Indian equity funds shrunk to the lowest in more than three years last month.

Flows to India Stock Funds Dwindle as Investors Hold Back
A bird flies past an electronic ticker board indicating stock figures for stocks. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Inflows into Indian equity funds shrunk to the lowest in more than three years last month after the record-hitting rally in stocks despite a faltering economy gave investors pause.

Stock plans received 13.1 billion rupees ($184 million) in November, according to the Association of Mutual Funds in India. That compares with 60.2 billion received in October, and is the smallest since June 2016 when equity inflows fell to 3.2 billion rupees.

A gush of cash from global funds drove a record-breaking rally in the nation’s main equity indexes last month as investors bet the worst of the economic slowdown may have passed. The gains, driven by a handful of large companies, continue to elude the broader market where retail investors typically focus.

Flows to India Stock Funds Dwindle as Investors Hold Back

“Due to the narrow rally, funds haven’t been able to generate returns seen in indexes,” said Vidya Bala, head of research and co-founder at Chennai-based Primeinvestor.in. “Investors still haven’t received the broad-based returns they ought to have got, which has slowed down fresh investments.”

An outflow of 18.45 billion rupees from three categories -- sector/thematic, value/contra, and large & midcap -- led to the overall decline in total inflows to equity funds, AMFI data show.

While global funds may be betting on the economy turning around -- surveys for manufacturing and services in November have both pointed to a rebound -- their optimism may not immediately rub off onto fund investors, said Bala.

“As seen in previous market cycles, retail investors are seldom early to participate in the bottoming of the market,” she said. “The mutual fund money comes in much later and is a gradual process.”

Still, contributions from regular savers into equity funds remained steady for the fourth straight month at about 83 billion rupees versus 82.5 billion in October, AMFI data showed.

“With markets touching new highs, some investors took money out,” said N.S. Venkatesh, chief executive officer at the AMFI. “We think they are waiting at the sidelines to reassess the situation to re-enter at lower levels.”

--With assistance from Ravil Shirodkar.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nupur Acharya in Mumbai at nacharya7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lianting Tu at ltu4@bloomberg.net, Ravil Shirodkar

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