MF stress test reveals low liquidity in some schemes

Some leading mutual fund houses could need as many as 30 days to liquidate 25% of their small-cap scheme, a stress-test mandated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) showed on Friday.

According to data collated from over 15 fund houses, including the top 10, there are indications that almost 50% of them would require over 10 days to liquidate 25% of their small-cap schemes. Among the top 10 fund houses, SBI Mutual Fund, would require 30 days to liquidate 25% of the scheme while Franklin Templeton would require just 2 days to do so. In case of liquidation of 50% of the scheme, some fund houses will require between 20 and 60 days.

The liquidity numbers look much better when it comes of mid-cap schemes, with most fund houses needing between 2 and 17 days to liquidate 25% of the scheme and around double the time for 50% of the scheme (See table).

Nippon India MF launches Nifty 500 Equal Weight Index Fund: Who should invest? Know benefits, tax implications
NPS: How to earn a monthly pension of Rs 1 lakh and build a retirement corpus of Rs 5 crore – Step-by-step guide
OLA Electric sees lacklustre debut on NSE, lists at Rs 76; Read to know more
Nifty’s upside reversed in short-term; Intellect Design and Ramkrishna Forgings top weekly picks of HDFC Securities’ Nagaraj

Fund houses are required to pay investors within three days after the investor has applied for redemption.

Also Read

Popular Vehicles  IPO allotment on March 15; Here’s how you can check allotment status

According to industry players, most of the numbers look quite reasonable, and even if some of them are on the higher side, most fund houses are sitting on reasonable cash (in excess of 5%) in their schemes. “In addition, to create more liquidity, many have moved money to large cap stocks also. So, cash plus large cap exposure should help them meet any pressure,” said a fund manager who did not wish to be named.

Late last month, the market regulator had asked fund houses to reveal various details of the stress test. The key parameters included, liquidity challenges if there is sudden redemption of say, 25% or more; portfolio construct between large, mid and small caps and cash; annualised standard deviation and annualised standard deviation of the benchmark; portfolio price-earnings ratio (others) and others. The deadline to disclosure the stress-test results was March 15.

Industry players said that details about all these parameters were given earlier as well. However, they will now be given in a single sheet to the investor at the time of investing to make them fully aware of all the risks that are involved with the scheme.

Securities lawyer Sandeep Parekh believes that the exercise (stress test) itself is unnecessarily spooking markets. Tweeting on X (earlier Twitter), he opined that there is no scientific basis for the stress-test. “It assumes liquidity to be a constant at best and extrapolates the past into the future at worst. If liquidity actually vanishes in a particular stock, it can just vanish not in 6 days or 14 days or whatever other metric is used – it will vanish in a microsecond. Analysis by extrapolation may or may not work. Yes, liquidity is often higher with higher volatility – but it’s not a given,” he wrote.

Also Read

Indian market has maintained certain level of sanity, says FM Nirmala Sitharaman

He also added that it is not the job of regulator to predict either market levels (no matter how well-meaning, even accurate) or liquidity (which can’t be predicted). “Markets have strong 2nd and 3rd order effects. Trying to control the immediate effect could impact other stocks, other economic activity etc. Best to stick to the philosophy of full disclosure and trust the process,” he added.

The fund manager quoted above also mentioned that while there are steady inflows through systematic investment plans, there have been outflows as well. “Investors have become much smarter now. They are regularly booking profits and investing afresh into schemes. So, there isn’t much cause for concern because even the money in small and mid-cap funds are coming through SIPs only,” added the fund manager.

Related Posts

PNB Housing Finance up over 10% as it sees large deal on BSE

Shares of PNB Housing Finance rose more than 10% to an intra-day high of Rs 894 from its previous close of Rs 810.90. The surge in the…

Muthoot Microfin IPO subscribed 2.83 times on Day 2 of offer

The Rs 960 crore initial share sale of Muthoot Microfin, the microfinance subsidiary of Muthoot Pappachan group, got subscribed 2.83 times on Tuesday, the second day of…

Share Market Highlights- Sensex, Nifty ends higher! Nifty holds 24,600, Sensex over 80,700; Realty and FMCG stocks shine

Share Market News Today | Sensex, Nifty, Share Prices Highlights: The benchmark equity indices ended Tuesday’s trading session in the positive territory. The NSE Nifty 50 gained…

Rs 3.6 trillion wiped off  from Adani Group market capitalisation

Shares of Adani Group companies were dealt a heavy blow on Tuesday with their market valuation declining by Rs 3.6 trillion as the counting of votes for…

Terminally Ill Fan Was Able To Play Borderlands 4 Early, And He Says It's Amazing

Earlier this year, a terminally ill Borderlands fan named Caleb McAlpine put out what he described as a “long shot” plea to Gearbox to allow him to…

The New Apple Pencil Pro Sounds Really Cool, But It Has Limited Compatibility

Exciting new Apple hardware is arriving on May 15, and for creatives looking to upgrade, the Apple Pencil Pro looks like a fun new tool to create…