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How mutual fund AUM across fund classes moved over the year?

20 Mar 2023 , 09:35 AM

One of the key parameters used to gauge the growth and reach of mutual funds is the assets under management. AMFI has now published MF flow and AUM data up to February 2023, so a comparison with February 2022 gives an illustrative picture of how the AUMs have moved over the year and what has triggered this shift in AUMs over the last one year. 

Macro picture of mutual funds AUM

The table captures the overall picture of the assets under management (AUM) of mutual funds, spread across open-ended funds and close-ended funds.

Macro Picture

No. of Schemes (Feb-23)

No. of Schemes (Feb-22)

Net AUM (Feb-23) Rs crore

Net AUM (Feb-22) Rs crore

AUM Growth YOY (%)

Open-ended Schemes

1,253

1,109

39,14,716

36,95,157

5.94%

Close-ended and Interval Schemes

163

370

31,541

61,139

-48.41%

Grand Total

1,416

1,479

39,46,257

37,56,296

5.06%

Data Source: AMFI

At a macro level, the AUM of Indian mutual funds grew by 5.06%, entirely driven by growth in open ended funds. The close-ended funds not only saw the number of schemes reducing by more than half on a yoy basis, but even the close-ended AUM almost halved over last year. The open-ended funds saw AUM accretion of 5.94%, largely driven by flows into equity schemes and passive funds and little contribution from market level wealth creation.

How AUM of active debt funds moved over last year?

The table captures the movement in the AUM of debt funds over last year across various active debt fund categories.

Active Debt Funds

Total Schemes (Feb-23)

Total Schemes (Feb-22)

Net AUM (Feb-23) Rs crore

Net AUM (Feb-22) Rs crore

AUM Growth YOY (%)

Long Duration Fund

2

4,081

2,550

60.02%

Gilt Fund with 10-year constant duration

4

1,797

1,335

34.57%

Gilt Fund

22 

21

16,795

15,691

7.03%

Money Market Fund

22 

20

1,18,620

1,19,233

-0.51%

Liquid Fund

36 

38

3,86,490

3,89,305

-0.72%

Ultra-Short Duration Fund

25 

27

88,805

90,437

-1.80%

Overnight Fund

32 

31

1,03,091

1,15,555

-10.79%

Dynamic Bond Fund

22 

26

23,365

26,199

-10.82%

Credit Risk Fund

15 

15

24,410

28,052

-12.98%

Corporate Bond Fund

21 

21

1,14,845

1,41,569

-18.88%

Medium to Long Duration Fund

12 

13

8,664

11,103

-21.96%

Medium Duration Fund

15 

16

25,867

33,842

-23.57%

Low Duration Fund

21 

23

92,215

1,21,217

-23.93%

Short Duration Fund

25 

26

90,970

1,24,564

-26.97%

Banking and PSU Fund

23 

22

73,324

1,01,148

-27.51%

Floater Fund

12 

12

56,324

87,596

-35.70%

Active Debt Funds Total

314 

317

12,29,660

14,09,397

-12.75%

Data Source: AMFI

Let us look at the number of active debt fund schemes first, which have fallen marginally over last year. The only category to see new schemes was the long duration category as investors preferred to lock in their funds at higher yields. Most of the other flows came into debt index funds, which are classed separately. Out of 17 schemes, only 3 schemes (with longer duration) saw accretion in AUM, with the other 14 categories seeing fall in AUM over last year. There was a clear preference away from many of the shorter duration schemes with substantial discretion offered to the fund manager. Overall debt funds saw compression in AUMs by 12.75% over last year, with floater funds, banking funds and shorter duration funds being the worst hit in terms of AUM compression.

AUM of active equity funds gave a good show last year?

Here, we capture the movement in the AUM of active equity funds over last year across various categories of active equity and growth funds.

Active Equity Funds

No. of Schemes (Feb-23)

No. of Schemes (Feb-22)

Net AUM (Feb-23) Rs crore

Net AUM (Feb-22) Rs crore

AUM Growth YOY (%)

Multi Cap Fund

18 

14

66,875

42,784

56.31%

Small Cap Fund

24 

24

1,31,568

1,00,407

31.04%

Large & Mid Cap Fund

26 

27

1,26,648

1,03,409

22.47%

Mid Cap Fund

29 

27

1,83,246

1,52,548

20.12%

Value Fund/Contra Fund

22 

22

89,510

75,627

18.36%

Sectoral/Thematic Funds

125 

117

1,68,775

1,43,325

17.76%

Flexi Cap Fund

35 

31

2,40,791

2,16,341

11.30%

Large Cap Fund

31 

32

2,35,168

2,16,794

8.47%

Dividend Yield Fund

8

10,183

9,422

8.08%

Focused Fund

26 

26

99,014

92,851

6.64%

ELSS

42 

40

1,49,998

1,41,036

6.35%

Active Equity Funds Total

386 

368

15,01,778

12,94,545

16.01%

Data Source: AMFI

Out of the 12 categories of active equity funds, all the categories saw accretion in AUMs over last year. What about number of schemes. One must remember that current regulations restrict any AMC from launching more than one scheme of the same category, except in case of flexi-cap funds and sectoral / thematic funds. Hence, you would typically see the accretion coming from that category, unless a new AMC comes into the picture or an existing AMC is not represented in any particular category. However, the 16% AUM accretion over last year has largely been an outcome of increase in the number of folios, SIP flows and a persistent supply of NFO money into equity oriented active funds. 

Another interesting trend is that bulk of the inflows have gone into mid cap and small cap fund; apart from multi cap funds. Clearly, investors seem to be leaning towards stocks beyond the top 100 stocks to generate alpha in their portfolios. In the last few years, the mid cap and small cap funds have not disappointed the investors and that impact is now showing in the AUM accretion in these funds. The 16% AUM accretion over last year is despite the markets hardly gaining 3-4% at an index level on a yoy basis.

AUM growth of hybrid and solutions funds over last year

Here, we capture the movement in the AUM of active hybrid funds and solution funds over last year across various categories. For simplicity, hybrid funds have been combined with solution-based funds.

Active Hybrid Funds No. of Schemes (Feb-23) No. of Schemes (Feb-22) Net AUM (Feb-23) Rs crore Net AUM (Feb-22) Rs crore AUM Growth YOY (%)
Multi Asset Allocation Fund

11 

10

25,948

18,933

37.05%

Retirement Fund

26 

25

17,811

15,931

11.80%

Childrens Fund

10 

10

14,170

12,770

10.96%

Conservative Hybrid Fund

20 

21

22,716

20,600

10.27%

Dynamic Asset Allocation/BAF

28 

26

1,91,440

1,73,639

10.25%

Aggressive Hybrid Fund

31 

33

1,53,637

1,44,281

6.48%

Equity Savings Fund

22 

22

16,445

16,572

-0.77%

Arbitrage Fund

26 

25

77,229

1,01,515

-23.92%

Active Hybrid Funds Total

174 

172

5,19,396

5,04,242

3.01%

Data Source: AMFI

Out of the 8 categories of hybrid and solution funds, six categories have shown decisively positive growth in AUM, while the AUM of equity savings funds have been flat. The only category to see a sharp fall in the AUM over last year is Arbitrage Funds, where the AUM has fallen 23.9% over last year. However, it must be remembered that arbitrage funds are not exactly equity/debt hybrids. Instead, then are more of a treasury product and with weak arbitrage returns, there had been a lot of unwinding in arbitrage funds in the last one year.

Despite a small base, the slew of NFOs allowed the multi-asset allocation funds to grow AUM at 37.1% yoy. Dynamic asset allocation Funds (BAFs) had a field period in FY22, but FY23 has not been to favourable for these funds and that is showing in tepid growth in AUM. Overall, the AUM of hybrid and solutions funds have grown by 3%, but what is gratifying is that the AUM at Rs5.19 trillion, makes them an interesting MF asset class.

But it was Passive Funds that ruled the AUM game

Here, we capture the movement in the AUM of passive index-based funds and ETFs. These refer to index funds in equity and debt and have been the big growth story. 

Passive Funds and ETFs No. of Schemes (Feb-23) No. of Schemes (Feb-22) Net AUM (Feb-23) Rs crore Net AUM (Feb-22) Rs crore AUM Growth YOY (%)
Index Funds

163 

78

1,38,814

54,737

153.60%

Other ETFs

155 

119

4,81,776

3,91,436

23.08%

GOLD ETF

12 

11

21,400

18,728

14.27%

Fund of funds investing overseas

49 

44

21,893

22,072

-0.81%

Passive Funds and ETFs Total

379 

252

6,63,883

4,86,974

36.33%

Data Source: AMFI

Passive funds have, perhaps, been the real story of the last one year. It is not just the 36.3% growth in AUM over last year, but even the unprecedented 50.4% growth in the number of passive schemes. There are two reasons for this growth. Firstly, there are no AMC limits on the number of passive funds and that has helped growth. However, that alone was not sufficient. There has been a subtle shift from active to passive investing as active fund managers (like their global counterparts) struggle to beat the index. As Jack Bogle said, “Why look for a needle in the haystack, when you can buy the entire haystack”.

The biggest takeaway from the AUM growth data is that passive funds and hybrid funds have a combined AUM of nearly Rs12 trillion as of date. This makes these alternate funds the third pillar of the India mutual funds story; apart from active equity funds and active debt funds. That is the big takeaway from the AUM data.

Related Tags

  • AMFI
  • AUM
  • MF
  • MFs
  • mutual fund
  • mutual funds
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