Has
Something Fundamentally Changed For Mutual Funds In India?
For two decades, the Indian Stock Market has had
an upward momentum. That some of this
was through NDA I, and ironically as the Kargil War raged, is interesting as a
phenomenon. The market, we are told, marches to its own drum, and anticipates
the future.
At the
same time, even as key indices doubled and trebled, it built a higher base
continuously, never falling back to original levels during periodic consolidations and corrections.
And of course, it moved now in response to not
just domestic issues, but global trends, as protectionist walls were lowered.
The combination of openness and regulatory caution in India has kept the worst
excesses from happening, even in the difficult days of 2008.
This maturing
of the bourses began, it is seen, within seven years after Liberalisation, in
1991.
Probably as soon as some people, mainly
Gujarati and Marwari market men, began to believe it was a permanent change for
the better, after the long years of Socialist constriction.
The fuel for the rise of the stock market
though, which mirrored the real economy after a fashion, till very lately, was
almost exclusively the ingress of Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) funds.
This showed up as billions of dollars, never
seen before. Though in overall size, even now, it does not exceed $30 billion
odd per annum.
The FII domination was palpable for years, and
they controlled the rise and fall of the indices based on what they chose to
do. Domestic retail and institutional money, mirrored the FII plays, or sat watching on the
sidelines.
Our companies mostly, with the exception of
Dhirubhai Ambani’s Reliance, did not dare to raise big finance from the stock
markets at first, and truth be told, there is much unexploited potential even
now.
The FII money, climbing over the years from a
billion or two at first, is not a large sum as a proportion of international
investment in the emerging markets. China gets over a $100 billion every year.
The Indian portion represents a tiny percentage still.
But nevertheless, it has been enough to
transform. It took our bourses, over the years, from a turnover of just $ 250
million or less in the eighties, through its stimulation, to around $ 2
trillion today.
As it
grew, there was intelligent speculation that a proportion of this money was
Indian, round tripping, from clandestine Black to Hawala to White on the
return journey, via the anonymous
participatory notes (PN) route.
This was
a loophole that the Government of the day was loathe to close for more reasons
than one. PNs were hosted by the FIIs, but they did not have to disclose the
identity of the beneficiaries.
Another portion of the flow in was from global
investment firms taking advantage of no tax treaties with countries like
Mauritius. These have recently been plugged in the main. But back in the day, investment entities registered
there enjoyed nil taxation in India on their stock market profits.
The domestic investors too had a lot of tax
incentives and exemptions that exist to this day, but not for short terms of a
year or under.
All the while, the relatively substantial
domestic “household savings”, higher than any other country except China,
stayed away from the bourses. Just 5% of this resource strayed from bank fixed
deposits into equity, and sometimes the debt instruments, directly, via stock brokers, but more often than not, through
private and Government bank floated Mutual Funds. These made an
entry into the country in 1993, and then grew exponentially over the years
since.
That is, with the exception of the Government
owned Unit Trust of India (UTI) that had a solitary mutual fund operating since
1964, joined by some more offerings in the eighties, paying steady dividends
for years. But eventually they, soon after the millennium, had to be wound up.
Government owned funds were too often forced to invest in Public Sector Units
(PSUs), and other Government debt, not always on commercial considerations, or
to its own benefit.
But in fiscal 2016 all this changed organically.
After a gestation period of nearly 23 years, the share of direct equity
investment, much of it via personal trading accounts online, via the
traditional brokers and through mutual funds doubled, from a largely inelastic
5.29% of household savings to 11.04%.
This trend is likely to accelerate, due to
better returns, and much better tax treatment, compared to fixed deposits in
banks. And because the dam of suspicion may have been breached at last.
Domestic interest rates are trending downwards,
with inflation and long term contracts in imported oil prices largely under
control.
This means fixed deposits in banks, taxable at
the marginal rate complete with tax deducted at source (TDS), cannot do very
much to satisfy going forward.
Also, with real estate prices, the other big
traditional favourite, stagnating with oversupply, there is less fresh
speculative investment going into it.
Meanwhile, reflecting these tectonic shifts, overall
asset management by the Indian mutual fund (MF) industry surged 30% to Rs.
21.45 lakh crore in September 2017, up from 16.51 lakh crore just a year
earlier.
The MFs have reached into the tiered cities in
a big way, for the first time as well. Investment from beyond the top 15 cities
rose to Rs. 3.79 lakh crores in September 2017, up from 2.74 lakh crores a year
earlier, representing a rise of 38.5%.
Individuals investing, as opposed to corporate parking
their liquidity, rose a quantum 50%. This is represented by 6.68 lakh crores,
up from 4.45 lakh crores a year ago.
The net
effect of this surge in domestic, largely retail money, going into the bourses
is that the markets have tended higher, ahead of results and fundamentals. Any
corrections have been shallow and recent levels have seen all time highs.
Also, and importantly, the FIIs have been
matched and bettered, and they cannot rule the roost and manipulate pricing
anymore, unless they bring in much bigger monies than so far. But, at the same
time, with even a strong, stable rupee to boot, they cannot stay away either.
The Government, on its part, is earning
international kudos for its structural reforms, such as the new bankruptcy law,
and the introduction of an online linked Goods and Service Tax (GST), even
though the execution of the latter has been clumsy.
The depth of the Indian financial market is
insufficient to absorb quantum leaps in foreign investment without more
structural reforms, growth, and modernisation across the board - in equity,
debt, futures, options, derivatives and so on. Nevertheless, a continued surge
from this point onwards is more than likely. The fact
that India does not yet have a fully convertible currency when other much
smaller countries do, is a glaring negative too.
But, as is long held true of the real economy,
the domestic demand for financial instruments too can be huge once the public
sheds its inhibitions. India may indeed be waking up to the charms of the
financial markets on a more widespread basis for the very first time.
With the cash economy being subsumed into the
official one post demonetisation to a large extent, the joys of tax evasion are
not what they used to be.
Putting the money to productive use to earn
higher yields instead of being forced to consume it as before, may benefit the
erstwhile cash hoarder as much as the national economy. It calls for a shift in
mindset, of course, but judging from the sharp increase in digital transactions,
the change of heart may be taking place automatically.
All in all, it is probably true to say that the
Indian Mutual Fund Industry could begin to emulate the US giants as drivers of
growth and excellence, with domestic houses plunging in to compete more
effectively with subsidiaries of international giants.
Investment Bankers, will not just engineer
mergers and acquisitions on an accelerated basis, but will increasingly tap the
financial markets. They are expected to dwarf the banking universe for opportunities
for their client Start Ups.
How long now before the paradigm shift from
reticence to risk appetite like the Hong Kong Chinese? And when the bolder ones amongst the
Investment Bankers look at launching some aggressive Indian Hedge Funds of
their own?
For:
The Sunday Guardian
(1,378
words)
November
8th, 2017
Gautam
Mukherjee
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