Open-ended debt mutual funds recorded net inflows of ₹1.07 lakh crore in July 2025, reversing the ₹1,711 crore outflow seen in June, according to Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) data.
The
rebound was driven by institutional-heavy categories. Money Market Funds attracted ₹44,573 crore — their strongest monthly tally in recent times — taking quarterly inflows to nearly ₹97,000 crore. Liquid Funds saw ₹39,354 crore in net inflows, while overnight funds garnered ₹8,866 crore after two months of redemptions.
New fund launches contributed meaningfully to the inflows. JioBlackRock Liquid Fund mobilised ₹8,917 crore and JioBlackRock Money Market Fund collected ₹6,285 crore in July.
Other
segments also reported gains. Low Duration Funds drew ₹9,766 crore, Ultra Short Duration Funds ₹2,277 crore, Corporate Bond Funds ₹1,421 crore, and Gilt Funds ₹1,050 crore.
Outflows were seen in select categories. Banking & PSU Funds recorded redemptions of ₹662 crore, Credit Risk Funds saw ₹221 crore in outflows, and Long Duration Funds lost ₹416 crore.
According to Nehal Meshram, Senior Analyst – Manager Research, Morningstar Investment Research India, July marked one of the strongest months for fixed-income flows in
FY 2025 so far, taking year-to-date net inflows beyond ₹2.28 lakh crore. The breadth of inflows across money market, liquid, and corporate bond segments indicated sustained investor demand for yield-carry opportunities, while appetite for duration-heavy strategies remained selective.
ALSO READ | Equity mutual fund inflows cross ₹40,000 crore for first time in July