Advertisement
X

Nifty Surges 7% in April, Yet Equity Inflows Dip: Why Are Investors Taking a Strategic Pause?

The five per cent dip in equity mutual fund inflows in April 2026 occurred because of a byproduct of seasonal technicalities and a strategic pause by investors following a historic market rally.

Summary
  • Equity inflows dipped 5 per cent despite Nifty's 7.46 per cent April rally.

  • Year-end tax planning created a high March base effect.

  • Investors shifted focus toward midcap, smallcap, and gold ETFs.

Advertisement

Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) appeared to slow their pace of investments into equity mutual funds in April 2026, with inflows declining five per cent month-on-month to Rs 38,440 crore from Rs 40,450 crore in March, according to AMFI data.

Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) inflows also moderated during the month, falling to Rs 31,115 crore from Rs 32,087 crore in March. The moderation in flows came even as the Nifty 50 delivered its strongest monthly rally in 28 months, surging 7.46 per cent in April.

Why Did Equity Mutual Fund Inflows Slow Down?

The five per cent dip in equity mutual fund inflows in April 2026 appears to have been driven by a combination of seasonal technical factors and a strategic pause by investors following a historic market rally.

The "High Base" Effect

In March 2026, equity mutual funds saw unusually high inflows of Rs 40,450 crore, largely because it marked the final month of the financial year. The surge was driven by New Fund Offer (NFO) closures and spillover SIP inflows from February. As a result, April naturally turned into a cooling-off phase after the year-end rush subsided.

Advertisement

Prabhakar Kudva, director and principal officer - portfolio management service, Samvitti Capital, told Outlook Money that the dip is a high base effect rather than a slowdown. “The decrease is marginal and nothing to be alarmed about. In the context of an industry that consistently mobilises a large pool into equities every month, a small dip of this magnitude is well within normal monthly variation. First, March is almost always an aberration on the higher side because of year-end tax planning, NFO closures, and lump sum allocations before the financial year ends, so any April number will look softer in comparison. It’s not a slowdown, it’s just a base effect.”

Tactical Profit Booking

The gains seen in April are likely to have incentivised mutual fund investors to book profits after brutal losses in March, wherein the Nifty declined 11 per cent as the US-Iran conflict raged on. Investors are likely to have used the sharp rebound in April to harvest gains and "sell into the strength," leading to higher redemptions and lower "net" inflows despite the rising market prices.

Advertisement

Rotation Into Safe Havens

Changing investor sentiments amid rising geopolitical risk are also likely to have pushed investors to move capital out of equity and into safe-haven assets. As equity inflows dipped,

Gold ETFs saw a 34 per cent spike in inflows (reaching Rs 3,040 crore) as investors sought a hedge against global uncertainty.

“The behavioural shift in the Indian retail investor over the last few years, from reactive to systematic, is the real story, and that hasn’t budged. April had its share of noise, like geopolitical tensions, tariff-related concerns, and a sharp rebound in markets that often makes lump sum investors pause and wait for a dip. None of that changes the long-term direction,” Kudva said.

The Debt Comeback

After a pullback in March, wherein institutional and corporate investors took out nearly Rs 3 lakh crore out of debt funds, in April, this money flooded back, with debt funds witnessing Rs 2.47 lakh crore in inflows. This shift in capital flows toward short-term debt and liquid funds diverted some of the momentum that had previously been focused on equities.  

Advertisement

Inflows Into MidCap And SmallCap Increase

In April, smallcap funds saw inflows of Rs 6,885 crore while midcap funds witnessed inflows of Rs 6,551 crore. Inflows into smallcap funds rose 10 per cent month-on-month from Rs 6,263 while midcap funds recorded an eight per cent month-on-month increase from Rs 6,063 crore.

Kudva attributed the increase to a sharp drawdown in the small and midcap space seen in the last twelve to eighteen months. He added investors often use such periods to increase their exposure to small and midcaps.

“Mid and small caps typically deliver their best returns once they’ve gone through a sharp drawdown, and we’ve had exactly that over the last twelve to eighteen months. Historically, every time the small and midcap segment has corrected sharply from the highs, the subsequent few years of returns have been substantially better than what large caps delivered in the same period. Investors who have been in this space long enough recognise this pattern and are using these periods to add, not exit,” Kudva said.

Advertisement

Kudva added that another major reason behind the growth in inflows in the mid and smallcap space was the strong earnings profile of midcap and small-cap firms in comparison to large caps.

“The earnings growth profile of mid and small caps is structurally superior to that of large caps. This is where the real bull case sits. A large part of India’s growth story today, whether it is capex, manufacturing, defence, renewables, speciality chemicals, Electronic Manufacturing Services (EMS), financial inclusion, or premium consumption, is being driven by mid-sized companies that are scaling rapidly off a smaller base. Large caps, by definition, are mature businesses growing at Gross Domestic Product (GDP) plus rates. Mid and small caps, when you pick the right ones, are compounding earnings at a much faster clip. Over time, earnings drive prices, and that is what investors are positioning for,” Kudva said.

Show comments
Published At: