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Trading in corporate bonds gathers pace in relief for MFs

Mint reported on April 29 that panicked investors have pulled almost ₹9,000 crore out of credit risk funds in just three days since the Franklin Templeton fiasco.

Published on: May 02, 2020 03:34 AM IST
Hindustan Times, Mumbai | By
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Trading in the corporate bonds market saw a spike this week, offering some relief to liquidity-hungry mutual funds that are facing redemption pressure in their debt funds. Daily trade volume has exceeded 10,000 crore in the three days to April 29, 15% more than the daily average turnover in April, the National Stock Exchange shows.

Assets under management (AUM) of credit risk funds dropped 19% in the three days to April 29, according to data compiled by Pulse Labs, a mutual funds data provider. (PTI)
Assets under management (AUM) of credit risk funds dropped 19% in the three days to April 29, according to data compiled by Pulse Labs, a mutual funds data provider. (PTI)

On April 28, 13,762 crore worth of bonds were traded, the highest in the month. The supply side is being pushed by mutual funds, trying to raise money by selling bonds as they face massive redemption pressures, especially in their credit risk funds after Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund decided to shut down six of its debt schemes.

Mint reported on April 29 that panicked investors have pulled almost 9,000 crore out of credit risk funds in just three days since the Franklin Templeton fiasco.

Assets under management (AUM) of credit risk funds dropped 19% in the three days to April 29, according to data compiled by Pulse Labs, a mutual funds data provider. That compares with the 5,569 crore of outflows, or 10% of the total assets under management, in the whole of March, which typically sees higher redemptions because of year-end sales by companies.

Under TLTRO, banks are required to deploy at least half of the corpus into the secondary market. The central bank had announced a total of 1 lakh crore under the targeted long-term repo operation scheme.

“Banks with surplus liquidity have already deployed a major portion in primary issues. We witnessed large participation in the secondary market as well,” said Swati Singh, executive director and head, fixed income at Avendus Wealth Management.

According to Gaurav Awasthi, senior partner at IIFL Wealth Management, the secondary market bond purchases by banks is an integral part of the central bank’s efforts to stabilise the credit markets.

 
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