India-dedicated funds have raised around $1 billion in Japan over the last one month, indicating a huge appetite for Indian equities in that market. |
Mutual fund industry sources said four entities, Jardine Flemming, Fidelity, Prudential and Deutsche, have mopped up around $1 billion in India-dedicated funds in January alone. The money is being invested in the Indian markets. |
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In addition to India-dedicated funds, a few Japanese funds, including the Tokyo-based Nomura, have started collecting subscriptions to invest in Indian stocks, sources said. |
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"This has never happened before. The Indian market is a reality now and no one wants to miss it. Traditionally, there has been very limited funds flow from Japan," said a senior executive with a foreign brokerage. |
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Local fund managers cited a weaker dollar and attractive valuations of Indian stocks as the twin reasons from Japanese money flow into Indian markets. |
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Jardine Flemming and Fidelity have together raised around $750 million in Japan to be deployed in India. Prudential and Deutche Asset Management have raised $150 million and $70 million, respectively. |
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"More and more India-dedicated funds are being raised in Japan. We expect the quantum could run into a few billion dollars in 2005," sources added. |
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The Middle East is also emerging as a new source of funds as the US-bound funds are being diverted to the Indian market now. |
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Zafar Sareshwala, director of Parsoli, a brokerage engaged in managing funds from the Muslim world told Business Standard, "There is enormous possibility in India. We have started in a modest way. Our expectation is the flow of money will be higher in the coming years." |
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In calendar 2004, India-dedicated funds attracted $1.7 billion, while Taiwan and China funds mopped up $1.5 billion. Going by the trend, this year mop-up by India funds globally could at least be doubled, fund managers said. |
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A recent report by the Washington-based Institute of International Finance said Asia was expected to maintain its dominant position by attracting nearly 60 per cent of net equity flows to emerging markets in 2005. |
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However, the Asia-Pacific's portfolio flows are expected to fall back slightly from $31 billion last year to about $30 billion this year. |
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"Nearly all the reduction will take place in India and South Korea," the report said. It is an argument that brokerages in India do not buy. |
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"More and more new funds are entering the market. The flow will continue even if the US rates rise and the dollar strengthens. Everybody wants to have a piece of Indian paper," said a fund manager. |
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