Private banks share in mutual funds surged to 20 months high in April: Motilal Oswal Report

ANI May 16, 2025 223 views

Private banks dominated mutual fund portfolios in April 2025, reaching an 18.9% share—the highest in 20 months. Sectors like Oil & Gas and Automobiles also saw increased allocations, while Technology and Capital Goods faced declines. The Motilal Oswal report highlights shifting investor preferences in key industries. This trend reflects renewed confidence in financial and energy sectors.

"Private Banks' weight rose to a 20-month high in Apr'25 to 18.9% (+50bp MoM; +170bp YoY)" – Motilal Oswal Report
New Delhi, May 16: The mutual fund (MF) industry's exposure to private banks rose to a 20-month high in April 2025, reaching 18.9 per cent, according to a report by Motilal Oswal.

Key Points

1

Private banks lead MF allocations at 18.9%

2

Oil & Gas and Automobiles see rising interest

3

Technology and Capital Goods decline in weightage

4

Insurance and Chemicals among top gainers

This marked a 50 basis points (bp) increase month-on-month (MoM) and a 170bp jump year-on-year (YoY), making private banks the top sector holding for mutual funds during the month.

It said "Private Banks' weight rose to a 20-month high in Apr'25 to 18.9 per cent (+50bp MoM; +170bp YoY)".

The report highlighted that mutual funds increased their allocation across several sectors in April. Apart from private banks, the weights of Oil & Gas, Automobiles, Consumer, Telecom, Retail, Insurance, Chemicals, and Real Estate sector too rose on a MoM basis.

The report added "In Apr'25, MFs showed interest in Private Banks, Oil & Gas, Automobiles, Consumer, Telecom, Retail, Insurance, Chemicals, and Real Estate, leading to a MoM rise in their weights".

On the other hand, sectors such as Capital Goods, Technology, Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs), Utilities, Metals, and Cement witnessed a decline in their respective weightage.

Oil & Gas saw a continued rise in weightage for the second straight month, climbing to an eight-month high of 6.4 per cent in April, up 30bp MoM, though still down 40bp YoY.

Automobiles stood at 8 per cent, while the weightage of Technology, which is the second-largest sectoral holding after Private Banks, moderated for the third consecutive month to 8.3 per cent in April, down 20bp MoM but up 30bp YoY. Healthcare has a 7.6 per cent share in mutual fund portfolios.

In terms of sectors that saw the highest rise in value on a MoM basis, Insurance, Textiles, Oil & Gas, Private Banks, and Chemicals led the chart.

Capital Goods' weightage declined to 6.9 per cent in April, a drop of 30bp MoM and 100bp YoY.

The data suggests a renewed interest of mutual fund industry in sectors like Private Banks and Oil & Gas, while traditional heavyweights like Technology and Capital Goods sector have seen a relative reduction in fund allocation.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is interesting! Private banks have been performing consistently well. No wonder MFs are increasing exposure. But I hope they don't ignore tech completely - that's where our future growth lies 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
As someone who invests in mutual funds, I'm happy to see this diversification. Oil & Gas and Automobiles getting attention makes sense with our growing economy. But 170bp YoY jump in private banks is massive! 💹
A
Amit S.
Mutual funds chasing short-term trends again? Private banks may be hot now, but what about long-term investments in infrastructure and capital goods? This herd mentality worries me sometimes.
N
Neha P.
Good analysis by Motilal Oswal! The shift from NBFCs to private banks shows increasing trust in organized banking sector. But I wish they'd included some data about how small investors like us are affected by these changes.
S
Sanjay V.
️As a middle-class investor, I'm more concerned about stable returns than chasing high-growth sectors. Happy to see insurance sector getting attention - that's where I've parked most of my SIP money for safety.
K
Kavita R.
The real story here is the continuous decline in technology sector allocation for 3 months! With India's IT sector being world-class, shouldn't we be investing more in our own tech companies? #MakeInIndia

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