At a time when the Indian economy is being lauded for its relentless growth
and Indian companies are in the process of raising thousands of crores in
the primary markets, the mutual fund industry is standing out like an
eyesore. The sorry state of affairs in the mutual fund industry is evident
from the miniscule corpus many of the fund houses are managing.

Here are the unpleasant facts. 18 out of 37 Asset Management Companies
(AMCs) have less than Rs1,000 crore as assets under management (AUM) in
their equity schemes. From these, 13 funds have less than Rs500 crore of
AUMs. On an average, these 18 fund houses have Rs355.99 crore in equity MF
schemes. Between them, they are managing a ridiculously low corpus of
Rs6,407.80 crore.
Reliance Mutual Fund, the largest fund house, has AUM of Rs35,204 crore.
HDFC Mutual Fund manages a corpus of Rs22,657 crore. These amounts might
seem princely when compared to the small fund houses, but compared to
international fund houses, even these are paltry.
Shinsei Mutual Fund is the smallest among the 18 funds, having a corpus of
Rs19.47 crore as on 10 February 2010 while Escorts Mutual Fund and Benchmark
Mutual Fund have Rs28.32 crore and Rs48.88 crore respectively in their
kitty.
Quantum Mutual Fund and Baroda Pioneer Mutual Fund have AUM of Rs48.96 crore
and Rs66.14 crore respectively.
Some of the bigger names in the industry like Bharti AXA Mutual Fund
(Rs308.37 crore), AIG Mutual Fund (Rs612 crore) and Axis Mutual Fund
(Rs874.11 crore) also appear in the list of funds having less than Rs1,000
crore.
Indian companies are capitalising on the recent bull-run by raising
thousands of crores through IPOs and FPOs. In 2010, 17 companies have come
out with public offers, (as on 8 March 2010). Despite the rush for raising
funds and the flourishing equity markets, the investing public seems
disinterested in vying for a share of the pie. The action in the equity
markets has failed to catch on to the mutual fund industry.
Indeed, the lull being witnessed by most equity fund houses is a study in
contrast to the growth of the economy. Despite equities being touted as the
best asset class for the long term, investors continue to shy away from
equities. Even the government’s efforts towards encouraging participation in
equity mutual funds have failed to do the trick.



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Posted By FinPower to FinPower-"Gives You Financial
Power"<http://finpower.blogspot.com/2010/03/low-mf-assets-speak-volumes-on-investor.html>at
3/08/2010 11:05:00 PM



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Thanks & Regards
FinPower

http://finpower.blogspot.com

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