HomeNewsBusinessMoneycontrol ResearchLarge liquid fund outflows not as worrisome as posed by headline numbers

Large liquid fund outflows not as worrisome as posed by headline numbers

There was a domino effect of IL&FS episode on liquid fund withdrawals, but only to a limited extent. A large chunk of outflows can be attributed to September-end phenomenon.

October 09, 2018 / 20:06 IST
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Neha Dave Moneycontrol Research

Assets under management (AUM) of the mutual fund industry stood at Rs 22.06 lakh crore as at September-end, down 12.5 percent from August, as per data released by the Association of Mutual Funds of India (AMFI). The significant fall of Rs 3.16 lakh crore on a month-on-month basis was on the back of huge outflows from liquid funds.

Despite market volatility and the credit event, inflows of Rs 11,172 crore in equity funds is very encouraging. Equity investments through systematic investment plans (SIPs), which tends to be relatively sticky, continued to show an improving trend with Rs 7,727 crore of SIP funds mobilised in September. Equity flows are holding up well, but the same can’t be extrapolated for future months if the sell-off in equities continues.

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Since liquid funds have been at the centre of the recent fall in both equity as well as fixed income markets, we delved deeper into the numbers. While the headline outflow number from liquid funds is eye-catching, digging deeper doesn’t paint such a gloomy picture. We decipher the monthly flows of liquid funds and understand the repercussions of the same for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) and system-level liquidity.

Massive outflow in liquid funds: Normal or fear led? Liquid or money market funds saw outflows to the tune of Rs 2.11 lakh crore in September as compared to inflows of Rs 1.71 lakh crore in August.

The huge pullout from liquid funds was mainly triggered by a sharp de-rating of commercial paper (CPs) of IL&FS group companies by rating agencies. The rating downgrade forced MFs with exposure to IL&FS group companies to mark down their net asset value (NAV). The credit event increased risk aversion among investors leading to huge redemption in liquid fund units.