Inflows into Indian equity mutual funds rose for the first time in three months in February, according to industry data on Tuesday, as stabilising earnings growth and a trade deal with the U.S. helped lift sentiment. Inflows rose 8.1% month-on-month to 259.78 billion rupees ($2.82 billion), data from the Association of Mutual Funds in India showed. However, fewer trading sessions during the month resulted in inflows through systematic investment plans dropping to 298.45 billion rupees from 310.02 billion rupees in January. "A notable feature of the month was the sharp pickup in flows into the mid-cap and small-cap (mutual fund) categories," said Himanshu Srivastava of Morningstar Investment Research India. Investments in gold exchange-traded funds slid sharply to 52.55 billion rupees in February from 240.4 billion rupees in January, when they surpassed equity mutual fund inflows for the first time. Last month, the benchmark BSE Sensex (.BSESN), opens new tab index dropped 1.2%, while the Nifty 50 (.NSEI), opens new tab index dropped 0.6%. Broader small-caps (.NIFSMCP100), opens new tab rose 0.3%, while mid-caps (.NIFMDCP100), opens new tab rose 1.2%. Foreign investors turned net buyers in February after three months of outflows, purchasing shares worth 226.15 billion rupees. While offloading 169.49 billion rupees of IT stocks last month due to fears of an AI-led disruption, foreign investors invested in sectors such as capital goods, financials, metals, and energy. Improving earnings, despite a one-time hit from new labour codes, supported the buying last month. India struck a trade deal with the U.S. in early February, which brought down the tariff on Indian goods to 18% from 50% earlier, granting Washington limited access to its market for agricultural products ($1 = 91.9700 Indian rupees)
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