(This story originally appeared in on Apr 10, 2024)
MUMBAI: An army of retail investors has found a strong footing on Dalal Street over the last decade thanks to a bullish market and a pandemic-driven digital push. In April 2015, India had just over 2 crore individual demat accounts — the actual number of investors would have been even less as one person can hold multiple accounts. As of Feb 2024, the tally has grown over seven times to nearly 15 crore.
Indirect retail participation in equities has also seen a stellar rise in a decade as the number of mutual fund folios has grown from less than 3 crore in March 2014 to over 11 crore as of Dec 2023. Retail investors, including high networth individuals, account for 91% of the Indian fund industry's nearly Rs 22-lakh-crore equity assets under management.
«In the past decade, mutual fund equity AUM demonstrated an impressive 30% CAGR. Moreover, monthly SIPs surged from a modest Rs 1,200 crore in 2014 to over Rs 19,000 crore in 2024. This remarkable growth in equity mutual funds reflects the substantial surge in equity investing culture among Indian investors,» said Radhika Gupta, MD and CEO, Edelweiss MF.
The SIP-driven rise of individual investors has provided mutual fund companies with ammunition, which they have deployed effectively amid bouts of foreign fund selloffs. Essentially, retail investors have emerged as a counterbalance to deep-pocketed foreign fund managers. «The resilience in the Indian market is driven by vibrant participation from the domestic