The main reasons for not trading online include lack of awareness about the procedures related to web trading systems, while there is a significant technology aversion and inertia as well.
The 'Sebi Investors Survey 2015' was conducted by Nielsen India to quantify actions and perceptions of retail investor and covered more than 2 lakh urban and rural households across the country. The survey also covered over 1,000 market participants including brokers and mutual fund agents.
The survey also showed that to attract new clients, most market participants use face-to-face interaction (52 per cent), followed closely by mass media advertising (51 per cent) and phone calls (50 per cent).
While bulk SMS (45 per cent) is very popular, social media (17 per cent) is not yet a common practice, it found.
In case of receiving information, market participants showcased their tech-savviness with 40 per cent ranking social media as their most important source of information, followed by the company websites and then the mass media.
According to the survey, more than 70 per cent of investors polled depend on financial planners and maintain running accounts/standing orders with their brokers indicating reliance on brokers and sub-brokers.
Despite a strong relationship with the broker, retail investors continue to primarily trust their own judgment when making investment decisions.
"Limited retail trading frequency, rising internet penetration and a surge in the number of authorised persons is significantly altering the traditional dynamics of the brokerage industry. Smaller brokers are either disappearing or are merging to form larger and more stable consolidation," the survey noted.
Interestingly, most retail investors trade either weekly or monthly and institutional algorithmic trading (computerised, automated trading) accounts for an increasing percentage of trades in the exchanges.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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