The company is aiming to collect Rs 300 crore to Rs 500 crore from the Money Market NFO by the 2026. The company is planning to bring two more NFOs by the year-end and take its overall AUM to Rs 2,000 crore.
The duration of this NFO is 0 to 365 days. The major beneficiaries of this fund are Corporate Treasuries, HNIs, retirees, retail and institutional funds. Recently, South Africa’s major financial services group Sanlam Group, through its Sanlam Emerging Markets (Mauritius) Ltd, garnered 17% of equity shares in Shriram AMC, expanding its footprint in South Asian markets, whereas Mission1 Investments LLC has 17.71% stake in the company.
Money market funds in India grew more than 2.5 times since May 2023, said Modani. “Money market funds are an extension of liquid funds. Liquid funds’ maturity cannot go beyond 91 days, whereas money market funds, depending on the interest rate situation, can go up to 365 days of average maturity. This category has grown significantly from Rs 1.10 lakh crore in 2023 to over Rs 3.5 lakh crore as per AMFI numbers, covering nearly 18% of the total debt market,” he said. This category has been giving a return of more than 50 bps compared to liquid funds, he added.