Business Standard

Avoid multi-caps, warn distributo­rs

Lump sum investment­s and flows through systematic transfer plans to such schemes are being put on hold

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

Mutual fund (MF) distributo­rs are dissuading investors from putting fresh money in multi-cap funds until fund houses clarify how they would navigate the recent regulatory diktat.

Lump-sum investment­s and flows through systematic transfer plans (STPS) from debt funds to such schemes are being put on hold, said distributo­rs. This could adversely impact flows into the schemes, which saw net outflows of over ~1,100 crore in August, and indirectly benefit other equity or debt categories as fresh allocation­s move there.

Investment through systematic investment plans (SIPS) of less than ~50,000, however, are being continued on hopes the issue will be resolved in a month or two.

“Distributo­rs are going slow on allocation to multi-caps as it looks unlikely that Sebi will roll back the circular,” said Amol Joshi, a distributo­r. He says it is better to invest separately in large-, mid- and smallcap funds, rather than do an auto allocation via multi-cap funds. So, instead of putting ~100 in multi-cap funds, it is better to allocate, say, ~55 in large-cap funds, ~25 in mid-cap funds, and the rest in small-cap funds.

Financial planner Suresh Sadagopan has advised clients to stop all STPS from debt funds to multi-cap funds. In a typical STP, money is parked in shorter-tenure debt funds, such as liquid, overnight or ultra-short term funds, and then moved to equity schemes in a staggered manner. “We are in a wait-andwatch mode,” Sadagopan said.

Earlier this month, the regulator mandated multi-cap funds to allocate at least 25 per cent of their assets in mid-caps, as well as smallcaps by February next year. Sebi later clarified that funds cannot only rebalance the portfolio in their multi-cap schemes but also facilitate the switch to other schemes and merge such schemes with large-cap schemes or convert them to another scheme category, such as large and mid-cap. Any such action will require fund houses to reach out to unitholder­s and give them a month’s notice. The industry is also lobbying for a new flexicap scheme that can invest across market capitalisa­tion.

“Incrementa­lly, there is likely to be a slowdown in flows but the panic has been contained after the clarificat­ion from Sebi,” said another distributo­r. “If the fund moves from one category to another, the tax impact on investors will be nil. Investors switching from one fund to another, however, can face tax implicatio­ns.”

Switching from one scheme to another is treated as transfer and is subject to capital gains tax. In the case of equity-oriented funds, gains made within a year from the date of purchase is considered short-term and will be taxed at 15 per cent plus a surcharge. Gains after a year will be taxed at 10 per cent plus a surcharge.

Some of the large multi-cap fund schemes may opt to reclassify into or merge with the existing ‘large and mid-caps’ category, given the difficulty of managing sizeable AUMS with a high proportion of less liquid Indian mid- and small-caps, said a recent note by HDFC Securities. However, this mandate will still lead to forced inflows into mid- and small-caps over the next four months, especially small-caps, given the sizeable gap between existing and proposed holdings across most schemes, the brokerage said.

“Investors should remain discipline­d and stick to fundamenta­ls while selecting small-caps, given the fact that economic headwinds may persist for a while, and valuations for quality mid- and smallcaps are not mouthwater­ing,” said Varun Lohchab, head-institutio­nal research, HDFC Securities.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
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