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Rediff.com  » Getahead » Women enter stock market to bring money home

Women enter stock market to bring money home

Source: PTI
September 18, 2020 15:09 IST
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Many of them are housewives looking to increase income in households struggling with the economic devastation caused by COVID-19.

*IMAGE: More and more women have entered the stock market during the lockdown. Photograph: Kind courtesy Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels.com
 

Women's participation in equity markets has surged during the COVID-19 pandemic and experts believe the growing need to share household expenses with rampant pay cuts and lay-offs is the reason, say experts.

Additionally, women are looking for alternatives to decreasing fixed deposit rates in banks, they added.

Interestingly, most of these women are first time investors and a large number of them are housewives. Retail participation has grown during the lockdown; this has been true for women as well.

"In line with the overall investors population, women are looking for alternatives to decreasing FD rates," said Shankar Vailaya, director, Sharekhan by BNP Paribas.

"The lockdown has just been an accelerator, allowing women to deepen their capital market knowledge via digital solutions," Vailaya added.

Online brokerage Upstox said it has witnessed a growth of 32 per cent in account opening by women from April to June 2020, compared to the preceding three months.

Of these, 70 per cent of the women are first time investors.

Additionally, more than 35 per cent of the brokerage house's women customers are housewives.

Ravi Kumar, co-founder and CEO, Upstox said, "The increased need for sharing household expenses with rampant pay cuts and lay-offs is what seems to have brought more women into trading.

"Also, factors like rising gold prices and low returns on bank's fixed deposits and real estate, investments have driven the growing trend of moving savings from physical to financial assets."

The attractive valuations since late March, says Kumar, have also led to an increasing number of women investors participating in the equity markets.

According to Upstox, around 74 per cent of female customers are from Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities like Visakhapatnam, Jaipur, Surat, Ranga Reddy, Nagpur, Nashik and Guntur, among others.

Out of the overall number of active female customers, 55 per cent are traders, whereas 45 per cent are investors (those that invest in equity delivery).

It has seen a jump in active female customers by 53 per cent from April to June 2020, as compared to preceding three months.

Nikhil Kamath, who co-founded Zerodha and True Beacon, said they have added 11 lakh clients since March 1, 2020.

Of these, women clients are 1.8 lakh.

The average age of the new customers is 33 years.

Tejas Khoday, co-founder and CEO, of FYERS, said in the last four months the stock broking fintech startup acquired over 20,000 new customers, of which 10 per cent are women traders.

But the overall traffic online includes 15 to 20 per cent women traders.

Moreover, they are more inclined to invest than trade.

In terms of expectations, Khoday said women want high profits in a very short period of time without too many entry/exits. This could also be because most of them are first-time investors.

Prakash Gagdani, CEO, 5paisa.com said women investors have started actively managing their money and are quite successful at it.

Earlier, Gagdani points out, most of them would avoid stocks, but now with simple technology and access to knowledge about markets, they are at the tipping point.

"I believe in a year or two their representation in the stock market would be significant."

*Kindly note the image has been posted only for representational purposes.

Feature Presentation: Ashish Narsale/Rediff.com

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