Business Standard

Fund managers struggle to beat red-hot market

- CHANDAN KISHORE KANT

India’s popular equity mutual fund (MF) schemes are increasing­ly coming under pressure when it comes to benchmark-beating returns for investors.

With the benchmark indices soaring 20 per cent this year, few actively managed schemes have managed such a return. Those that have include HDFC Equity and HDFC Top 200, both managed by Prashant Jain, chief investment officer of HDFC MF. The margin of outperform­ance is, however, only 50 basis points.

Fund managers have over the past year been advising investors not to keep their return expectatio­n higher. Further, on several occasions, they stressed the fact that the phase of generating very high alpha (outperform­ance over the benchmark index) could be over.

Mahesh Patil, co-chief investment officer (equity) at Birla Sun Life MF, says the past three years have been quite good from the schemes' outperform­ance point of view and repeating these might not be easy. “Investors’ return expectatio­ns need to be reasonable. The size of a scheme can be a constraint but it has to be seen in relation to the investment style and strategy of the scheme,” says Patil, who manages the country's largest large-cap fund, Birla Sun Life Frontline Equity Fund.

Some fund managers believe that underperfo­rmance or less alpha creation serve well at times. “We can’t afford to keep outperform­ing year-on-year. If we do, there is a problem, as it will build irrational expectatio­ns from investors, which can put further pressure on the fund house and the fund manager," says a senior.

Sankaran Naren, investment head at the largest fund house, ICICI Prudential MF, is among those wanting investors not to come with unusually higher return expectatio­ns. Known for contrarian calls and steady performanc­e over the past few years, Naren has been advising balanced advantage funds to investors, given the latter's psyche of panicking when markets fall sharply.

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