Why SIP inflows continue to rise, despite market volatility
With a 'Keep calm and carry on' approach, have investors become mature?


SIPs, which allow investors to put small amounts periodically into mutual funds rather than a lumpsum, have long been considered a strategy that frees them from speculating in volatile markets as well as average the purchase cost of mutual fund units. But it’s a strategy that requires some hand-holding from a financial advisor or nerves of steel to see a massive erosion in the value of an investment and yet continue to invest.
In 2008, Joshi, who was running an entrepreneurial venture, rushed to protect his investment. He pulled out ₹90 lakh, despite being advised against it by his advisor, and shifted it into debt funds, where it stood for the next six months or so even as the Sensex went from 9,000 to 16,000-18,000 in the next six to eight months.
Joshi realised his mistake and went back into the market in August 2009. “If you look at it from a compounded period it has probably cost ₹4 crore or ₹5 crore. It cost a lot to make a mistake like that. In many other periods in the last 10 years, if I had gone in and out, over a period of three months, it probably wouldn’t have cost that much, but that particular period was seismic,” he says, adding that he has since stayed invested.
A Maturing IndustryThere have been several other corrections since, including the latest in the wake of the coronavirus scare, and with each correction a new set of SIP investors seems to have become more aware and wiser, says Nilesh Shah, managing director of Kotak AMC. “In 2008, people redeemed, corporates also redeemed, and they suffered losses. That year also made people wiser. Later in 2013, during the European crisis, markets again corrected sharply. Again, another set of investors learnt. So, today we have a set of investors who have become wiser from those experiences,” says Shah.
He recollects a recent visit to Nashik where a retired woman, who was interested in investing for growth, approached him for advice. “I told her we are going through an uncertain time where because of coronavirus things could fall sharply. And if I asked her to invest in equity and it went down 10 percent, would she curse me? And she said, ‘No, every correction is a great opportunity to invest’.”
Despite volatility and markets not performing in the past two years, inflows through SIPs have continued to grow by an average of ₹1,000 crore in the last three years, from around ₹6,000 crore per month in 2017-18 to ₹8,000 crore in 2019-20. Awareness seems to have played its part, though investors could equally be disinclined to redeem at a loss.
NS Venkatesh, CEO, Association of Mutual Funds in India, attributes it to the financial literacy programmes by AMFI and Asset Management Companies (AMCs), and the ‘Mutual Funds Sahi Hai’ ad campaigns. “All those things have given an impetus for the investor to understand that this is part of market movements and we should not panic,” says Venkatesh. Industry experts attribute the higher closure of SIP accounts in the first half of last year to profit booking and goal-based redemptions.
Broadly, Computer Age Management Services (CAMS) data shows that over the last three years, the percentage of SIPs being discontinued has decreased (see box). Besides, says Nilesh Shah, people who have direct SIPs have a greater chance of discontinuing during market volatility than those with regular plans.
“The other trend that is visible is if you see regular plan SIP vis-a-vis direct SIP, in the direct SIP, the stoppage rate is almost twice than that of SIPs being assisted by mutual fund distributors. If there’s no one to anchor you, you do end up taking a slightly emotional decision.”
Advisors help build diversified portfolios based on goals like education, marriage or retirement. “For less than 10 years, I just recommend a debt fund SIP. For over 10 years, equity investing,” says Kothari. But the question remains, what if the market tanks when the investor needs the money as per his/her goal? When the goal is three to four years away, he also realigns the investor’s portfolio from long-term equity to short-term debt.
“If one switches four years before the goal to a short term (category), the investor is able to give more certainty to the portfolio. If an investor remains in equity even at the end of his goal then, because of volatility, the uncertainty is huge,” he says.
Because the fact remains that no one can time the market at the top or the bottom. As Nilesh Shah points out, “There is no way I could have sold all my equity at the beginning of January 2018 and bought everything in August 2019. It just doesn’t happen.” Investors should continue with disciplined investment, not becoming greedy when things are looking too good and not becoming extremely fearful when things are looking bad. “It’s not sexy, it’s not a smart way to say it, but that’s the reality we have accepted. That we are not in a position to predict the future, the only thing that has worked in asset allocation.”
First Published: Mar 12, 2020, 15:34
Subscribe Now