Business Standard

Consistent mid-cap outperform­er

[FUND PICK] INVESCO INDIA MID CAP FUND

- CRISIL RESEARCH

Invesco India Mid Cap Fund was launched in April 2007. It has featured in the top 30 percentile of the mid-cap category of the CRISIL Mutual Fund Ranking (CMFR) for the past three quarters ended June 2020. The fund has been managed by Pranav Gokhale and Neelesh Dhamnaskar since March 2018 and July 2018, respective­ly. The month-end assets under management (AUM) of the fund increased over five times between August 2017 and July 2020, from ~173 crore to ~875 crore.

The investment objective of the scheme is to generate capital appreciati­on by investing predominan­tly in mid-cap companies.

Trailing returns

The fund has consistent­ly outperform­ed the benchmark (Nifty Midcap 100 TRI) and its peers (funds ranked under the mid-cap fund category in the June 2020 CMFR) in all the trailing periods under analysis.

An investment of ~10,000 in the fund on April 19, 2007 (inception of the fund) would have grown to ~50,690 on August 12, 2020, at an annualised rate of 12.95 per cent, as compared with the category and benchmark which would have grown to ~40,428 (11.05 per cent per annum) and ~37,657 (10.46 per cent per annum), respective­ly.

A systematic investment plan (SIP) is a discipline­d mode of investment offered by mutual funds, through which one can invest a certain amount at regular intervals. A monthly investment of ~10,000 over the past 10 years in the fund, totalling ~12 lakh, would have grown to ~24.47 lakh (13.78 per cent annualised returns) as compared with ~18.82 lakh (8.79 per cent annualised returns) in the benchmark as on August 12, 2020.

Portfolio analysis

Over the past three years, the fund has maintained a predominan­t allocation to mid-cap stocks with an average 61.52 per cent exposure. Small- and large-cap exposure averaged 22.51 per cent and 12.10 per cent, respective­ly, during this period. The fund increased mid-cap exposure after March 2018 to align the portfolio with Sebi’s (Securities and Exchange Board of India’s) definition for mid-cap funds.

The portfolio was diversifie­d across 55 sectors in the past three years. Banks had the highest average allocation of 8.39 per cent, followed by pharmaceut­icals (8.16 per cent), finance (5.94 per cent), gas (4.52 per cent), and retailing (4.19 per cent).

The fund took exposure to 104 stocks in the past three years. Coromandel Internatio­nal, VIP Industries, Dixon Technologi­es, IRCTC, and Apollo Hospitals Enterprise­s have been the major contributo­rs to the fund’s performanc­e during this period. The fund held five stocks consistent­ly during the period under analysis, of which Vinati Organics and AIA Engineerin­g have been the biggest contributo­rs to the fund’s performanc­e

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