AHMEDABAD: It is hard to miss the irony. At a time when the banking industry is 
in a crisis globally, fixed deposits of public sector banks have emer  
ged as the safest haven for badly hit investors who are frantically liquidating 
their positions in equity markets and mutual funds. 

While asset management companies have started feeling the heat as retail and 
corporate investors queue up to redeem their funds, branches of public sector 
banks have seen a rush for term deposits from investors who want to ensure 
there is no further erosion in their wealth. Investors are even shying away 
from private sector banks, after the financial crash abroad. 

The State Bank of India, the largest state-owned bank, which has launched a 
special 1,000-day fixed deposit scheme, has mobilized over Rs 5,000 crore 
across the country in just 12 working days. It is also witnessing huge inflow 
of money into other schemes. 

In Gujarat alone, deposits worth almost Rs 1,000 crore have come so far this 
month, compared to just Rs 300 crore of inflows into deposits in all of October 
2007. 

Many PSU banks are seeing infusion of funds, which are getting diverted from 
the stock markets. "Our term deposits normally grow at 17% annually. If the 
present trend continues, we could end up with 25 to 30% growth," said a top 
official of Bank of Baroda. "Our deposit schemes are drawing funds diverted 
from the stock market," acknowledged H C Pattnaik, chief general manager, SBI 
Gujarat. 

The flight from markets to banks is not difficult to understand. From a peak 
level of 21,200 on January 10, 2008, the sensex has fallen almost 50%. During 
the same period, assets under management (AUM) of equity funds have dropped by 
22%, while AUM of liquid funds has plummeted by around 44%. Sandeep Dasgupta, 
CEO, Bharti-AXA MF, admitted that liquid and FMP (fixed maturity plan) schemes 
have been under redemption pressure from corporate and retail investors. 

"As per the industry figure, around Rs 45,000 crore worth of funds have been 
redeemed in the month of September," he added. Redemption pressure picked up in 
the second half of September and has only intensified in October following the 
global financial crisis, he added. Nilesh Shah, deputy MD, ICICI-Prudential 
Mutual Fund, said that investors are redeeming funds from liquid and FMPs 
without looking at the portfolio of the fund. "There is a crisis of confidence 
in the system," he added. 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Investors_dump_equities_and_MFs_for_good_old_FDs/articleshow/3605688.cms

The law of gravity says no fair jumping up without coming back down







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