Business Standard

Long-term outperform­ance via active portfolio churn

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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.

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