Business Standard

CASH EXPOSURE IS UP

-

Large-cap funds LIC MF Large Cap Axis Bluechip Franklin India Bluechip SBI Bluechip Cash and equivalent­s (% of portfolio)

12.29 12.12 8.75 8.28 call is that when the markets run up, a fund manager who is heavily into cash gets left on the sidelines and subsequent­ly struggles to catch up with his fully-invested peers. “Historical­ly, the experience has been that it takes time for the markets to fall to lower levels. But upward moves tend to be very sudden and sharp,” says Gautam Kalia, head, investment solutions, Sharekhan by BNP Paribas. Thus, if the expected returns from equities are, say, 12-14 per cent in a year, and a fund manager is out of the markets on those two days when it generated an 8 per cent return, he will have a difficult time catching up.

This has happened in the past too. Many fund managers were caught on the wrong foot in 2009, when the markets rebounded after a very bearish 2008. Since then, many fund houses have put in place internal stipulatio­ns requiring fund managers not to exceed a 5 per cent cash level.

Another argument against high cash holdings is that the investor pays the fund house an expense ratio for investing in equities. The asset allocation decision should be taken by the investor or his advisor. If the fund manager decides to go heavily into cash, he skews the investor’s asset allocation. Thus, by and large, it works in the investor’s favour if funds remain fully invested.

But what about funds like Quantum Long-term Value Equity that go up to quite high cash levels (and yet it has given a 12.28 per cent compounded annual return over the past 10 years)? Says Nilesh D Shetty, associate fund manager, equity, Quantum Mutual Fund: “We follow a process-driven approach. We have buy and sell limits for each stock in our universe. In a bull market, the sell limits of a lot of stocks get triggered. The fund manager then has no option but to sell those stocks. If valuations are expensive and the buy limits of very few stocks get triggered, and the fund also receives inflows, then the cash level tends to rise.” High cash levels, however, allow the fund to deploy money in the ensuing correction at more attractive valuations.

Should investors then take an exposure to funds that take high cash calls? Says Kalia: “Check if this strategy has helped the fund manager generate alpha over the long term. Also, see whether the fund house has communicat­ed its mandate of taking high cash calls clearly to investors.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India