Total Investors in India 3.37 crore, mutual
funds were 2.2 crore households - 1.9
crore households invested in equities
Form
SEBI Investor Survey 2015
** Total Investors in India 3.37 crore
** Mutual funds were 2.2 crore households
** About 1.9 crore households invested in
equities
** Nearly 77 lakh households invested in
bonds (public, private and PSU).
** Among derivative instruments, there were
30 lakh equity and currency derivatives investors
** About 21 lakh investors in commodity
futures.
** Amongst the equity investors, about 18%
(or 33 lakh) had invested in the primary (IPO) markets.
SEBI Investor Survey 2015 (SIS 2015) attempts
to generate a deep understanding of retail investors and to also gain insight
into why so many of those households who can potentially invest in the
securities markets, do not.
To support this key objective, a random
sample would obviously not provide the desired investor and non-investor mix.
Thus, the initial listings sample and the
final survey sample use a detailed and unique targeted sampling process, which
is skewed towards localities with a higher number of demat accounts.
This ensures that the survey’s sampling
technique is exclusive and directed at generating accurate insights.
Consequently, incomes in the listings
exercise are, on an average, three times the city average and this survey can
not be compared to either earlier investor surveys or with other surveys that
use random samples.
As a first step in the SIS data collection
effort, a set of 2,04,694 households were listed and basic information about
demographics, income, savings and investments were collected.
In the second step, a subset of 50,453 amongst
these listed households were chosen to conduct the final survey.
In light of the statistical law of large
numbers, the listings data was used to create an estimate of the total number
of investing households in India at the end of the 2015.
Using a bootstrapping methodology to project
the total investor households using distinct projection values for rural and
urban surveys, by state, it was estimated that there were a total of 3.37 crore
investor households in India.
Of these, 70% (2.37 crore) reside in urban
areas while the other 1 crore were rural households.
Among these, mutual funds were the most
popular investment instrument and nearly 66% (or 2.2 crore households) were
investors.
There were an estimated 1.9 crore households
which invested in equities and 77 lakh households which invested in bonds
(public, private and PSU).
Among derivative instruments, there were 30
lakh equity and currency derivatives investors and 21 lakh investors in
commodity futures. Amongst the equity investors, about 18% (or 33 lakh) had
invested in the primary (IPO) markets.
It is obvious that since the last survey was
conducted in 2008-09, the effects of the financial crisis have been felt in
India and many investors opted to leave the markets in the height of the crisis.
However, with a rise in consumer confidence,
investor expectations and the indices, the retail investor has returned with
percentage figures reaching back to levels seen in the last survey.
This is also supported by the SIS data, which
observes that 50% of the securities markets investors have started investing in
the last five (5) years.
Additionally, due to a rise in the number of
households, the total number of investing household has increased
significantly.
While these estimates can throw some light upon the total
number of investors, these are approximations from a survey, which uses
targeted sampling (essential for the purposes of this survey, as mentioned
above) and thus, can not be considered a perfect representation of ground
realities.
To answer that question and quantify the exact number of
investors in India, SEBI is undertaking a large scale de-duplication of demat
accounts and mutual fund folios across depositories, linking these accounts
back to the unique PAN numbers of investors.
This will allow for a definitive and complete investor
count.
However, an estimate is also being provided here to
provide an indication of the breadth and trends in investing.
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