
May turned out to be a stock market bazaar like no other—where foreign players and promoters quietly set up stalls to offload marquee stakes, and mutual funds walked in like savvy shoppers with pockets full of cash, sniffing out blue-chip bargains before the closing bell.
🧐 Market Dynamics: A Perfect Setup for Bargain Hunting
Promoters and FIIs Exit Stage Left
May witnessed heightened stake sales by promoters and foreign institutional investors (FIIs). Block and bulk deal volumes surged past ₹50,000 crore—the highest in nine months—creating a unique entry point for domestic institutions.
Mutual Funds Step In with Dry Powder
Domestic mutual funds deployed over ₹29,000 crore via block deals in May. In contrast, total secondary market equity purchases by MFs stood at ₹53,000 crore—showing that block deal participation alone made up over 55% of their activity.
🔍 What Are Block Deals?
A block deal is a high-value trade—typically above ₹10 crore—executed between two parties via a separate trading window to avoid price disruption. These often involve promoters, institutional investors, and mutual funds striking deals off the retail radar.
🧳 Why the Rush to Sell?
Promoters and foreign institutions weren't just exiting blindly. Here's why they were unlocking capital:
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Regulatory Cleanup: SEBI's public float norms nudged many promoters to reduce stakes.
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Succession Planning: IndiGo’s Gangwal family, for example, gradually exited to prepare for legacy transitions.
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Global Reallocation: BAT (ITC) and Singtel (Bharti Airtel) are reshuffling capital across geographies.
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Profit Booking by FIIs: With Indian markets hovering near all-time highs, several FIIs took the chance to cash in.
🎯 Key Deals: Stocks and Strategies
🧾 Top Mutual Fund Bargain Picks
🧾 Company |
🎯 Promoter Exit (₹ Cr) |
🏦 MF Buys (₹ Cr) |
🚀 Top MF Buyer |
ITC Ltd |
11,500 |
7,880 |
SBI MF (₹2,480) |
InterGlobe Aviation |
11,500 |
4,900 |
ICICI Pru MF (₹2,300) |
Bharti Airtel |
8,500 |
5,345 |
Parag Parikh MF (₹2,139) |
📦 Other Noteworthy Acquisitions
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PNB Housing Finance: MFs bought ₹1,350 cr of the ₹3,460 cr block.
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Paytm (One97): ₹1,190 cr of the ₹2,100 cr deal.
-
Others include:
"The scale of MF participation in May’s block deals shows how domestic institutions have evolved into market stabilizers, capable of absorbing supply shocks," said Siddharth Bhamre, Head of Research at Asit C Mehta.
📊 Mutual Fund Block Deal Activity (Last 6 Months)
📅 Month |
🏢 Company |
🤝 Seller/Promoter |
💰 Amount by MF |
📌 Key MF Buyers |
June |
Vishal Mega Mart |
Samayat Services LLP (Promoter) |
₹3,636 cr |
SBI MF, HDFC MF, Kotak MF |
|
Asian Paints |
Reliance (Siddhant Commercials) |
₹7,703 cr |
SBI MF |
|
Asian Paints (addl.) |
Reliance affiliate |
₹1,876 cr |
ICICI Prudential MF |
|
Bajaj Finserv |
Promoter |
₹5,506 cr |
SBI MF, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley |
|
Aptus Value Housing |
Institutional sellers |
₹804 cr |
SBI MF, Axis MF, Morgan Stanley |
May |
ITC |
British American Tobacco (BAT) |
₹7,880 cr |
SBI MF, ICICI Pru, Mirae, Nippon, Quant |
|
InterGlobe Aviation |
Gangwal family (Promoter) |
₹4,900 cr |
ICICI Pru, Invesco, Kotak |
|
Bharti Airtel |
Singtel |
₹5,345 cr |
Parag Parikh, ICICI Pru, Kotak, HDFC |
|
PNB Housing Finance |
Bulk sellers |
₹1,350 cr |
Multiple MFs |
|
Paytm (One97) |
Private shareholders |
₹1,190 cr |
Multiple MFs |
💼 Strategy & Cash Utilization
-
Analysts like Jayant Mundhra and Siddharth Bhamre pointed out that mutual funds held 20–30% in cash, waiting for better entry points.
-
SEBI rules discourage hoarding of idle cash, pushing MFs to deploy dry powder efficiently into these discounted bulk transactions.
🌐 FIIs and Overall Inflows
📊 May Snapshot |
Value |
Block & Bulk Deal Volume |
> ₹50,000 cr |
MF Block Deal Investments |
₹29,000+ cr |
MF Total Equity Purchases |
₹53,000 cr |
FII Net Equity Inflows |
₹21,445 cr (full month) |
FII Cumulative Inflows (May) |
₹36,299 cr (till May 23) |
🧠 Big Picture & Outlook
May 2025 will be remembered as the month when mutual funds smartly executed a domestic bargain hunt, scooping up nearly ₹29,000 crore in high-conviction block deals.
Their aggressive, cash-efficient acquisition amid promoter and FII exits reflected not panic, but strategic conviction—backed by robust inflows and regulatory nudges.
As India’s capital markets deepen, these flows mark a paradigm shift: from passive accumulation to targeted, institutional-scale buying in the country’s blue-chip core.
🔚 Final Take
In the chessboard of Indian equity markets, May saw mutual funds make bold opening moves. By absorbing large-scale exits and cherry-picking marquee names, they’ve signaled a new era of agile, opportunistic investing—where timing the trade is just as important as trusting the trend.
Discalimer!
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