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HDFC MF’s Naari Nivesh Yatra Puts Women At The Centre Of Investor Education

For many women, savings still mean the things they have always trusted — some cash kept at home, a bit of gold, or money parked in safe options that do not earn much

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HDFC MF’s Naari Nivesh Yatra Photo: Company
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Summary of this article

  • Naari Nivesh Yatra aims to boost women’s mutual fund participation

  • HDFC MF will hold 60 Self Help Group sessions nationwide

  • Financial literacy initiatives focus on savings, SIPs, and wealth creation

  • Women’s financial inclusion supports household security and long-term growth

Women have always played an important role in managing household money in India. In many homes, they decide how much should be spent, what should be saved, when gold should be bought, how school fees should be managed, and how the family should prepare for a difficult month. Yet, when it comes to formal investing, many women remain outside the conversation.

HDFC Mutual Fund’s newly launched Naari Nivesh Yatra tries to address this gap by taking investor education directly to women across the country. The initiative is designed as a nationwide investor education and awareness programme to encourage women to take charge of their financial future through informed investing and long-term financial planning.

The campaign was flagged off at Chetana College, Bandra, Mumbai. Over six months, two canters will travel in different directions across India, covering several cities and towns. At each destination, the fund house plans to conduct community engagement activities, including street plays and interactive investor awareness sessions. The idea is to simplify basic financial concepts and make investing feel less distant for women who may have been comfortable with saving, but not necessarily with mutual funds or other market-linked products.

1 June 2026

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A major focus of the campaign will be women at the grassroots level. HDFC Mutual Fund plans to conduct 60 dedicated sessions with women's Self Help Groups (SHGs) across the country. These sessions will focus on financial planning, goal-based investing, long-term wealth creation, and disciplined investment habits.

Navneet Munot, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, HDFC Asset Management Company, said: "Across India, women are often the most disciplined savers in a household, and yet, structured investing has remained out of reach for many because the right conversation around personal finance never happened. The Naari Nivesh Yatra is built around that conversation. Through street plays, community sessions, and direct engagement with SHGs, we want to bring that conversation directly to women and help them see investing not as something complicated and distant, but as a practical tool for financial goals they already have in mind."

From Household Saving To Structured Investing

The larger point behind the initiative is that Indian women are not new to money management. Many are careful savers. They may know exactly how to run a home on a fixed budget, cut back where needed, and save something for school fees, medical needs, or a family emergency. But money kept aside is one thing; making that money grow over time is another.

For many women, savings still mean the things they have always trusted — some cash kept at home, a bit of gold, or money parked in safe options that do not earn much. They may feel safe because they are familiar. But as prices keep rising, this money may not grow enough to meet bigger future needs. This matters even more now, as more women are earning, running small businesses, inheriting assets, supporting household expenses, and taking part in important financial decisions.

For many women who are investing for the first time, the problem is not just fear of market risk. Often, they have not had easy access to the right information. The way money products are explained can itself become a barrier. Many women may hesitate to ask basic questions because the conversation often begins as if they already know the terms. Terms such as Net Asset Value (NAV), Systematic Investment Plan (SIP), asset allocation, risk profile, and market volatility can make investing sound complicated. By using street plays and community sessions, HDFC MF appears to be trying a more relatable route.

The campaign is also an extension of HDFC Mutual Fund’s Barni Se Azadi investor education initiative, which encourages people to move beyond traditional saving habits and understand the role of informed investing. The Naari Nivesh Yatra takes that idea into a more focused direction by placing women at the centre of the conversation.

This is important because women’s financial independence cannot be built only through income. It also needs control over savings, knowledge of investment choices, awareness of risks, and the confidence to ask questions before investing.

Zerodha, Aditya Birla Sun Life MF, And Others Have Taken Similar Steps

HDFC MF is not alone in seeing women as an important audience for financial literacy. Several financial services players have been working on investor education in different ways, though their formats vary.

Zerodha, through Zerodha Varsity, has built one of the better-known free financial education platforms in the country. Varsity explains stock markets, mutual funds, personal finance, and trading concepts in simple modules. Beyond digital learning, Zerodha Varsity has also worked on financial literacy for rural women. It conducted a two-day workshop in Chikkodi, Karnataka, in association with Pankh India and Svatah. The workshop was aimed at creating a safe space for women to discuss their financial issues and take charge of their money.

This is a useful example because it shows that financial education for women cannot be limited to urban, digitally active investors. Many women need basic conversations around savings, debt, budgeting, borrowing, and financial decision-making before they move to products such as mutual funds or equities.

Aditya Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund has also been running its ForHER initiative, which is positioned as an investor education and awareness effort for women. The initiative uses videos, podcasts, and learning content to explain mutual funds, financial wellness, and financial independence. The idea is to speak to women who want to invest, but often hold back because they do not know how to begin or whom to trust for basic guidance.

Aditya Birla Sun Life Insurance has also tried to reach women through campaigns that talk about protection, money confidence, and planning for their own financial security. Its HER Insurance platform and women-focused outreach initiatives have tried to bring attention to insurance and protection planning for women. The group has also launched women-led Shakti branches, giving the initiative both an advisory and distribution angle.

Mirae Asset Mutual Fund has taken the campus route. In early 2026, Mirae Asset Mutual Fund brought the subject to college students. Through a series of financial literacy sessions across cities, it reached nearly 40,000 girl students and spoke to them about investing at a stage when many are just beginning to think about earning and managing money. This approach is significant because financial habits often form early. If young women learn about saving, compounding, inflation, risk, and long-term investing before they begin full-time earning, they may be better placed to make independent financial decisions later.

LIC Mutual Fund has also tried a different model by launching what it described as India’s first women-centric AMC branch in Delhi. The branch was aimed at encouraging greater participation of women in mutual fund investing and creating a more comfortable space for women investors to discuss their financial needs.

Franklin Templeton, along with The Times of India, ran the Change the Soch – Kanyakumari to Kashmir Drive, a nationwide financial literacy campaign focused on financial empowerment, especially among women. The campaign used interactive education sessions and community engagement, and also reached women associated with SHGs and community collectives.

Why Women-Focused Financial Literacy Matters

The common thread across these initiatives is clear. Financial firms are realising that women cannot be treated as a side audience. They are savers, earners, borrowers, investors, caregivers, entrepreneurs, and decision-makers. Still, when it comes to putting money into formal investment products, many women have not had the same role that they have long played in running household finances. This gap has not come out of nowhere. In many homes, women may be the ones stretching the monthly budget and keeping household expenses under control, but the actual investments are still often handled by the men in the family.

Some women may not have a bank account they actively use, while others may not be comfortable investing through apps or online platforms. Even those who earn may leave investment decisions to a husband, parent, or financial advisor. In smaller towns and villages, many women may still have only a basic idea of mutual funds, SIPs, insurance, or retirement planning.

This is where investor education can make a difference. A woman who understands how compounding works may start investing earlier. A woman who knows the difference between saving and investing may not keep all her money idle in a savings account. A woman who understands insurance may not remain under-protected. A woman who knows how to check whether an entity is regulated may avoid fraud.

However, awareness campaigns must go beyond slogans. For such initiatives to create real impact, they need to explain costs, risks, lock-ins, market volatility, and grievance redressal clearly. Women should not be pushed into products merely in the name of empowerment. The goal should be informed choice, not aggressive selling.

HDFC MF’s Naari Nivesh Yatra, therefore, comes at an important moment. As more financial firms compete to reach women investors, the real test will be whether these campaigns help women ask better questions, compare products, understand risk, and make decisions that suit their own goals.

For women, the first step may not always be a large investment. It could be understanding where their money goes, building an emergency fund, starting a small SIP, getting adequate insurance, updating nominees, or simply learning how to read a statement. But once that first step is taken with confidence, the journey from saving to investing becomes less intimidating.

According to experts, the growing number of such initiatives suggests that the financial industry is beginning to recognise a simple truth: women’s financial participation is not just a social goal. It is also central to household security, long-term wealth creation, and India’s wider financial inclusion story.

FAQs

1. What is HDFC MF’s Naari Nivesh Yatra?

It is a nationwide investor education campaign aimed at helping women understand investing, financial planning, and long-term wealth creation.

2. Who will the campaign focus on?

The campaign will focus strongly on women at the grassroots level, including Self Help Groups, through street plays and interactive awareness sessions.

3. Why do women-focused financial literacy campaigns matter?

Many women manage household money but may not actively invest. Such campaigns can help them understand risks, compare products, and make informed financial decisions.

ENDS

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