Foreign players control a little over 10 per cent of the domestic fund market.
Foreign fund houses outperformed their domestic peers in terms of garnering assets in 2010-11.
In a year that saw the industry's assets decline by over six per cent, foreign players saw a marginal slip of 1.7 per cent.
On the other hand, local players were beaten harder as they lost over seven per cent of assets.
This is in contrast with the dominant view that foreign players would be at the receiving end, in view of domestic majors commanding an established brand equity.
The top five players in the fund market are domestic and include Reliance MF, HDFC MF, ICICI MF, UTI MF and Birla Sun Life MF.
They control close to 60 per cent of the market.
However, barring Birla, all the other majors saw a dip in their assets. UTI, ICICI and Reliance were the top losers, with asset erosion of 16 per cent, nine per cent and eight per cent, respectively. LIC MF witnessed a drastic loss of 74 per cent during the year.
"Foreign fund houses are now being recognised by the Indian retail investors. Our brand building is also catching up fast with homegrown players.
"Going forward, there is better scope as penetration is abysmally low compared to the developed markets," explains the chief executive officer of a foreign AMC having operations in India.
Currently, foreign players control a little over 10 per cent of the domestic fund market.
In absolute terms, close to Rs 50,000 crore outflowed from domestic fund houses' kitty in FY11, while foreign players witnessed an erosion of just Rs 1,263 crore (Rs 12.63 billion).
Major