Equity Mutual Fund Inflows Drop 22% in May to 13-Month Low Amid Profit-Taking and Valuation Concerns

Nandini Gupta
3 Min Read
Highlights
  • Equity MF inflows fell 22% in May.
  • Large-cap funds saw biggest drop.
  • SIPs hit record ₹26,688 crore.
  • AUM still reached record ₹72.2 lakh crore.

Equity mutual fund (MF) inflows in India witnessed a sharp decline in May 2025, as profit-taking and high valuations led many investors to adopt a cautious stance. Net equity MF inflows stood at ₹19,013 crore — a 21.7% drop from April’s ₹24,269 crore — marking the lowest monthly inflow in 13 months. This also represents the fifth consecutive month of declining flows into equity schemes.

Category-Wise Breakdown: Large-Caps Hit the Hardest

The slowdown was broad-based across most equity fund categories:

Large-cap funds: Inflows plunged 53% to ₹1,250 crore.

Mid-cap funds: Fell ~15% to ₹2,809 crore.

Small-cap funds: Down ~20% to ₹3,214 crore.

Flexi-cap funds: Stayed resilient at ₹3,841 crore.

Other categories: Outflows in ELSS, value/contra, and dividend-yield funds.

The sharp fall in large-cap flows suggests that investors are becoming wary of overheated valuations.

Equity Markets Remain Resilient Despite Lower Inflows

Despite lower fund flows, equity markets stayed strong:

Sensex: Up ~1.5% in May.

Nifty: Gained ~1.7%.

Total mutual fund AUM (Assets Under Management) reached a record ₹72.2 lakh crore, up from ₹69.99 lakh crore in April. Equity investments have now maintained positive inflows for 51 straight months, showing steady investor confidence.

Why Are Inflows Slowing?

Key drivers behind the pullback include:

  1. Profit-taking:
    Investors booked gains after recent rallies.
  2. High Valuations:
    Elevated P/E ratios made fresh investments riskier.
  3. Global & Geopolitical Uncertainties:
    • Global inflation
    • Interest rate worries
    • India-Pakistan tensions
      All added to risk-off sentiment.

Shift in Investor Preferences: SIPs, Hybrids & Arbitrage Gain Popularity

While lump-sum investments slowed, SIPs remained strong:

SIPs: Hit a new high of ₹26,688 crore in May.

Hybrid & Arbitrage Funds:
Hybrid fund inflows jumped ~46% to ₹20,765 crore; arbitrage funds alone drew ₹15,702 crore.

Debt Funds:
Witnessed outflows of ₹15,908 crore, especially from liquid and overnight categories.

What Experts Are Saying

Venkat N Chalasani (AMFI Chief):
“Investors showed caution and shifted to hybrids/arbitrage.”

Himanshu Srivastava (Morningstar):
Highlighted profit-booking and global uncertainties as key factors.

Business Today Data:
Net-to-gross inflow ratio fell to ~33.6%, indicating strong redemption pressure.

Bottom Line

This is a short-term dip, not a long-term reversal. AUM and SIPs show strong underlying confidence. Investors are becoming more selective, favoring hybrid, arbitrage, and SIPs. Future inflows could rebound if valuations ease and macro risks stabilize.

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