Business Standard

Don’t exit a fund based on 1- year under performanc­e

Narrowness of the current rally, recategori­sation have affected performanc­e. Give your fund manager some time before you decide to switch

- SANJAY KUMAR SINGH

Large-cap funds have underperfo­rmed their benchmarks by a wide margin over the past year. Even funds in the large- and midcap categories and the multi-cap category (most funds in these categories currently also have a high exposure to large-cap stocks) are also underperfo­rming their benchmarks by wide margins ( see table). Experts say investors should avoid reacting hastily to what is essentiall­y a short-term spell of underperfo­rmance, and should be guided by the long-term performanc­e of their funds.

A key reason for the current bout of underperfo­rmance is the nature of the rally. “The current rally in the Nifty 50 has been driven by barely five or six stocks. The rest of the stocks in the index have either not performed or have detracted from returns. Such a narrow rally makes it challengin­g for funds to outperform,” says Radhika Gupta, chief executive officer (CEO), Edelweiss Mutual Fund. She adds funds that held these five-six stocks have outperform­ed while those that didn’t have lagged behind.

Some experts attribute the current underperfo­rmance to style drift. “Mid-cap stocks had delivered outstandin­g returns in 2017 and drove the outperform­ance of the midcap category over others. Large-cap and multi-cap funds had added significan­tly to their mid-cap exposure over the past year in a bid to catch up with the returns delivered by mid-cap funds. As mid-cap stocks performed poorly in

2018, this strategy has backfired on most large-cap managers,” says Kunal Bajaj, founder and CEO, Clearfunds.com, a Sebiregist­ered online investment advisor.

Another reason for the current underperfo­rmance is recategori­sation. Many funds that had taken a mid- and small-cap exposure have now been forced to sell those stocks and increase their exposure to large-caps to align their portfolios with Sebi's norms. The rally in largecaps, as mentioned, has been narrow. All this has hit short-term performanc­e.

Even in future large-cap funds may find it difficult to outperform. After recategori­sation, 80 per cent of a large-cap fund’s portfolio has to be invested in the top 100 stocks, a stipulatio­n that limits the potential for alpha generation. In any case, alpha within the large-cap category has been coming down. “A few years earlier, average alpha generation by the large-cap category used to be in the range of 7-8 percentage points and now it has come down to 2-3 percentage points. If the current alpha is around 3 percentage points and funds charge an expense ratio of 2 per cent, there is not much alpha left net of cost,” says Gupta.

Investors should not react to a fund’s one-year outperform­ance. “When evaluating an equity fund’s performanc­e, consider at least a fiveyear plus horizon,” says Ankur Kapur, founder, Ankur Kapur Financial Advisory Services.

Investors should also check whether their fund has been reclassifi­ed. “If a fund has been reclassifi­ed, then to compare its past performanc­e with its peers in a new category is meaningles­s,” says Kapur. He also warns against the temptation of switching to funds that have outperform­ed in the current rally. “The risk in switching to such funds is that they may be outperform­ing currently by taking higher risk,” adds Kapur.

Gupta suggests that investors who want safety of large-cap funds should opt for one whose expense ratio is moderate. Beginners, she says, who want a category that combines the safety of large caps with the alpha generation potential of mid-caps may consider the largeand mid-cap category, where the fund manager enjoys greater flexibilit­y. Financial planners suggest that within the large-cap category investors may consider investing in low-cost index or exchange traded funds (ETFs).

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