The number
of individuals owning stocks directly in the Indian stock markets - instead of
through mutual funds - is about nine times higher than any other equity market
across the globe, said Tarun
Ramadorai, Professor at Said Business School, University of Oxford while
delivering his keynote address at the India Finance Conference (IFC) organised
at Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A) on Wednesday.
Quoting data
from National Securities Depository Limited (NSDL) - a depository for the
equity market in India - obtained for a period between 2004-12, Ramadorai says,
"About 10-18 percent of the NSDL equity value is held in individual
accounts (excluding beneficial owners), while mutual funds account of 3.5-5
percent of NSDL equity value - MFs are even less important that these numbers
suggest because, 60 percent of mutual funds were held by corporations in 2010, and 65 percent of individual
stockholders in 2009 owned no mutual funds." He was however not clear about the
reason why individuals preferred to own stocks directly in India.
Speaking on
topic,"Getting Better:Learning to invest in the Indian stock market',
at the two-day IFC organised jointly by IIM-A, IIM-Bangalore and IIM-Calcutta,
the professor from Oxford University said, that there is, however, an
increasing trend towards directing investments through mutual funds.
Tellingly,
Ramadorai who analysed 20 million individual accounts from NSDL said rookie
investors in India tend to choose "high momentum stocks" unlike
investors with 7-8 years of experience. There is also a greater tendency among
rookie investors to hang on to stocks that are losing in the market, and
selling the stocks that are performing well.
"From
the data analysed, the older
investor in the Indian stock market tend to get better returns than a rookie
investor by avoiding promoter
driven stocks, staying away from IPOs, investing in smaller stocks, favouring
institutionally owned stocks," says Ramadorai who goes on to state that
the older investors in the stock market had churned out returns that are higher
than the average returns, while the rookie investors have substantially
underperformed in the market.
"If you
stick around the market you are going to get better," he
says adding that performance
of an individual investor improves after spending 5-6 years in the equity
market. "This rate of
improvement is significantly affected by his own investment experience,"
Ramadorai added.
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