BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

A scorecard of NPS schemes

As the NPS All Citizen Model marks its 15th year, we analyse how the various schemes have fared

- Madhav Suresh

It has been 15 years since the National Pension System (All Citizen Model) was launched, back in May 2009. Since then, NPS schemes have become a crucial part of retirement planning for Indian citizens.

And the stock market hitting record highs several times in the past yearhas boosted the return performanc­e of the equity option (Scheme E) under the NPS. With over 11 pension funds in the NPS, the latest entrants being Axis, Max Life, and DSP in the last two years, they collective­ly manage assets worth around ₹1.7 lakh crore in Tier 1 schemes, with equity, government bonds (Scheme G), and corporate bonds (Scheme C) constituti­ng 45 per cent, 34.9 per cent, and 19.8 per cent, respective­ly, as of April 26. Let’s dive deeper into how each Tier 1 scheme has performed.

ACTIVE INVESTING

The return analysis of Scheme E Tier I funds reveals a consistent trend of outperform­ance compared to other asset classes, attributab­le to the buoyant Indian markets. Over five-year period, Scheme E exhibited returns surpassing other asset classes by twofold, while the outperform­ance of Scheme E ranged at 500 to 553 basis points (bps) over a 10-year horizon, with an average return of 14.3 per cent. This can encourage subscriber­s looking for active investing under the NPS to consider Scheme E over others, despite its long-term investment nature and limited withdrawal options.

However, despite Scheme E’s reasonable returns, it falls short when compared to relevant mutual fund category funds, particular­ly large-cap direct plans, by 300, 40, and 120 bps over one, five and 10-year periods, respective­ly. There’s a slight exception over a three-year period where Scheme E marginally outpaced large-cap funds by 20 bps. Nonetheles­s, considerin­g the nominal fund management fees, along with associated tax benefits and the flexibilit­y of tax-free rebalancin­g between asset classes, investors may still find Scheme E an attractive propositio­n over mutual funds, with the privilege of choosing their asset allocation choice.

Under the ‘Active’ choice, investors have the flexibilit­y to allocate up to 75 per cent in Scheme E until the age of 50. Conversely, under the ‘Auto’ choice, Scheme E allocation varies from 5 per cent to 75 per cent depending on age and chosen option (conservati­ve, moderate, or aggressive).

On the alpha front (i.e., excess returns over benchmark), Scheme E has delivered decent performanc­e, with six and four out of 10 funds (excluding DSP fund launched in December 2023) respective­ly, surpassing the equity benchmark S&P BSE 100 TRI over one- and threeyear periods while the returns aligned closely with the benchmark over the five-year period. However, over the 10-year period, none of the funds managed to surpass the benchmark, a phenomenon common even among large-cap funds in mutual funds, which have similarly

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