Long-term outperformance via active portfolio churn
Quant Active Fund was launched in April 2001 and has featured in the top 30 percentile of the multi-cap funds category of CRISIL Mutual Fund Ranking (CMFR) for six consecutive quarters through March this year.
The fund is managed by Ankit Pande, Vasav Sahgal, and Sanjeev Sharma. The month-end assets under management of the fund has grown to ~2,300 crore in April this year, from ~7 crore in May 2019.
The investment objective of the scheme is to generate capital appreciation and provide long-term growth opportunities by investing in a portfolio of large-cap, midcap, and small-cap companies.
Trailing returns
The fund has underperformed in the oneyear trailing period due to the recent market decline. However, for equity funds, long-term performance of three years and above should be looked at.
Quant Active Fund has outperformed the benchmark (Nifty500 Multicap 50:25:25 Total Returns Index) and its peers in the past 2-, 3-, 5-, 7-, and 10-year trailing periods. Its peers are underperforming in the longer trailing periods.
An investment of ~10,000 in the fund on April 1, 2005 (inception of the benchmark of the fund), would have grown to ~1.31 lakh on May 12 this year at an annualised rate of 16.24 per cent.
Systematic investment plan 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 for the past 10 years in the fund, totalling ~12 lakh, would have grown to ~35.28 lakh (20.64 per cent annualised returns), compared with ~25.09 lakh (14.26 per cent annualised returns) in the benchmark as on May 12.
Portfolio analysis
In the past three years, the fund took exposure across market capitalisations, while maintaining a relatively higher allocation to large-cap stocks. The exposure to largecap stocks averaged 46.31 per cent, while that to mid-cap and small-cap stock allocations averaged 21.21 per cent and 28.54 per cent, respectively. The portfolio was diversified across 34 sectors in the past three years. Finance had the highest average allocation of 13.53 per cent, followed by consumer non-durables (11.75 per cent), and pharmaceuticals (11.68 per cent).
The fund took exposure to 252 stocks in the past three years. Of these, Stylam Industries, Neuland Laboratories, Majesco, Linde India, and Fortis Healthcare were the highest contributors to the fund’s performance.