Mutual Funds Turn Net Sellers in February, Offload Rs 4,100 Crore in Equities After 3-Year Buying Streak
In a notable shift in market activity, mutual funds (MFs) have emerged as net sellers in Indian equities for the first time in nearly three years. So far in February, domestic funds have sold shares worth approximately Rs 4,100 crore, marking a break from their prolonged buying trend.
This is the first instance of net selling since April 2023, when mutual funds had offloaded equities worth over Rs 4,532 crore. Prior to that, they had remained net buyers for 34 consecutive months, consistently supporting the domestic equity market.
How Significant Is the Rs 4,100 Crore Selling?
While the headline number appears substantial, industry experts suggest the scale of selling needs to be viewed in context. The mutual fund industry currently manages assets worth nearly Rs 40 lakh crore. Against this backdrop, a net sale of Rs 4,100 crore represents a relatively small fraction of overall assets.
For perspective:
- In January 2026, MFs had purchased equities worth Rs 42,355 crore.
- During 2025, they invested around Rs 4.93 lakh crore in Indian equities.
- February’s selling has occurred in six out of seven trading sessions so far.
This indicates that the current selling phase is modest compared to the scale of previous inflows.
Portfolio Churn, Not Redemption Pressure
Market participants believe that the selling does not signal panic or heavy redemption pressure. Instead, it appears to be driven largely by portfolio rebalancing and profit booking.
Fund managers are reportedly trimming exposure in certain underperforming stocks and reallocating capital toward stronger, high-quality names—particularly in the large-cap segment. Some funds are also adjusting their portfolios after accumulating stocks during earlier phases when foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were selling aggressively.
Importantly, systematic investment plan (SIP) inflows remain steady, suggesting that retail participation continues to provide underlying support to domestic funds.
Impact of Index Rebalancing and Global Factors
Another contributing factor could be index rebalancing. January 31 is a key review date for major NSE indices, and global index providers also announced changes in early February. Such rejigs often trigger buying and selling activity among funds tracking or benchmarking against these indices.
Additionally, evolving macroeconomic and geopolitical developments are influencing capital flows. Key factors include:
- Progress and revisions in the India–US trade agreement, particularly related to agricultural goods.
- Ongoing geopolitical uncertainties.
- Expectations of further monetary policy easing.
Amid these dynamics, investors have shown increased interest in alternative asset classes such as gold and silver ETFs, bond funds, and hybrid funds.
Broader Market Weakness Adds Context
The shift in fund flows is occurring alongside broader market consolidation. The Nifty 500 index is currently down around 3.4% from its 52-week high. More strikingly, nearly 50% of stocks in the index are trading over 20% below their respective 52-week peaks.
This divergence indicates selective weakness beneath the surface, even as headline indices appear relatively resilient.
Foreign investor flows have been intermittent, and sustained inflows may depend on:
- Relative valuation comfort.
- Currency stability.
- Global risk appetite.
The Indian rupee continues to hover near its recent lows despite policy measures, which could also influence foreign capital allocation decisions.
What Should Retail Investors Watch?
For retail investors tracking stock market news, the key indicator to monitor is whether equity fund inflows remain stable. If domestic inflows continue and SIP contributions stay robust, occasional portfolio churn is unlikely to materially impact market stability.
However, sustained equity outflows combined with continued net selling would signal a more structural shift in sentiment.
At present, the data suggests strategic reallocation rather than structural weakness.
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