"Several Small And Mid-Size
Fund Houses Are Losing Big Money Everyday"
"EVERY
fund house claims that the current market turmoil is not a
cause for undue concern as they are here for the long haul.
"
"The
equity markets showing no sign of recovering, the situation
for middle- and small-tier AMCs is only expected to worsen
in the coming days"
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EVERY
fund house claims that the current market turmoil is not a cause
for undue concern as they are here for the long haul.
After all, ups and downs are part of a regular market cycle,
they point out. This may be true for the top asset management
companies. But the rate at which some of the smaller mutual
funds are bleeding cash, the landscape of the Indian mutual
fund industry may change dramatically before long.
Thanks
to the dependence of fund houses on institutional investors
and declining interest among investors for equity schemes, several
middle and small fund houses are losing big money everyday.
An ET study of the results recently announced by AMC's shows
that for every Reliance Mutual Fund and UTI AMC that have seen
their profits rise, there is a Principal or Kotak whose earnings
are only shrinking. And with the equity markets showing no sign
of recovering, the situation for middle- and small-tier AMCs
is only expected to worsen in the coming days. This may just
hasten the much anticipated consolidation process in the industry,
many experts predict, pointing out to the recent takeover of
Lotus AMC by Religare as an instance.
The
worst hit are AMCs that have begun their operations recently.
Take for instance, Mirae Asset Management. The AMC said it had
lost over Rs.47 cr in the financial year ended March, an amount
that would have only shot up in the past few months. (All the
numbers we quote are before taxes.) Its assets under management
contracted by 57% in October, a trend seen at several other
AMCs too as institutional investors moved their investments
from MFs to bank fixed deposits. Mirae is now into cost-cutting
mode; it had created a splash earlier when it took a bunch of
scribes and distributors on a trip to South Korea last year.
Another
recurring theme in the numbers is that of personnel costs. The
three-year-old Fidelity AMC earned over Rs.80 crore as management
fees, but spent close to Rs 50 crore of it on its personnel.
It has accumulated close to Rs 160-crore losses, just in the
past three years. Many others too have been accumulating losses
year after year. In fact, AIG spent more on its personnel (Rs
16 crore) than what it earned through fees (Rs 12 crore). Abhay
Aima, HDFC Bank country head of equity and private banking group,
says in a relatively new industry AMCs have no option but to
put up with high personnel costs.
(Source:
- Economics Times) |