Moneycontrol Pro Panorama | Rethinking sectoral funds
Investors who generally get trapped in these schemes are generally the same ones who buy stocks on tips.
Dear Reader,
The Panorama newsletter is sent to Moneycontrol Pro subscribers on market days. It offers easy access to stories published on Moneycontrol Pro and gives a little extra by setting out a context or an event or trend that investors should keep track of.
Warren Buffett has strongly advocated against investing in IPOs. His logic is that these are orchestrated to achieve the best result for selling investors. He noted that these deals are negotiated to achieve the best price for the sellers and put buyers at a disadvantage. We have seen this to be true even in Indian markets where companies and their advisors take advantage of the market euphoria to push their IPOs at high valuations.
The same is also true in the mutual fund industry. Asset management companies take advantage of the euphoria in a sector or theme to launch a fund. More often than not, these funds hit the market when stocks in the sector are near their peak.
A media report says that more than a third, or 50 out of 145 such funds, are trading below their net asset values (NAVs). Quoting Value Research data, the report says mutual funds have garnered over Rs 72,000 crore by way of equity NFOs this year, of which 85 percent is from sectoral/thematic schemes.
A sector or thematic fund is focused on a handful of stocks that generally move in tandem. Mutual funds are expected to offer investors the benefit of diversification which sectoral/thematic schemes fail to address.
Investors should realise that sectoral and thematic schemes are cyclical in nature and generally have a short life as compared to the broader market. They move in sharp spurts, as we saw in defence stocks, where the fundamentals overshoot the price. It then takes a long time for valuation to catch up with price.
Investors who generally get trapped in these schemes are generally the same ones who buy stocks on tips. Furthermore, as AMCs pass on higher commission to the distributors and other sales agents for NFOs, their self-interest drives sales over that of the investor.
Story continues below Advertisement
Sectoral funds managers have to stay invested in the stocks — they can reduce weightage — irrespective of the cycle they are in. The fund manager of an actively managed fund can reduce his stake, but cannot completely come out of it. But in a passive fund, the investor is stuck with stocks of the sector irrespective of the market and business cycle.
If investor interest is paramount, SEBI and other authorities need to revisit these high-risk sectoral and thematic schemes. Any fund manager of a diversified fund worth her salt will be adding more weight to a sector that is performing provided fundamentals are supporting the stocks.
Investing insights from our research team
Is the tide turning against Indian equities?
MC Pro Diwali 2024 Portfolio: Light up your investing journey in Samvat 2081
Can ICICI Bank’s valuation re-rate further?
IndiGo Q2 FY25 numbers fly at a low altitude
Stable earnings growth, possible listing of NTPC Green to support stock
Radico Khaitan is a concoction of smooth execution, continued growth
Godrej Consumer Q2: Steady numbers amid cost headwinds
JSW Steel: Weak Q2; levers in place for better FY25
Syngene: FY25 guidance intact as biotech funding revives
Metro Brands: Eyeing strong growth in H2 FY25
What else are we reading?
Moneycontrol Pro Market Outlook | Headwinds ahead: Brace for rising market volatility
Chart of the Day | Unpacking the reasons behind India’s funds outflow
Unsecured loan books develop cracks. How big a worry is this for Indian lenders?
Upwardly mobile consumers are shaking up the FMCG market
The Eastern Window: Is BRICS emerging as a counterweight to US power?
Is the Indian bond market rally over?
The elections may not be the last word on government formation in Maharashtra
Meet the salad hawkers that are valued like technology stocks (republished from the FT)
Mamata Banerjee’s TMC remains in pole position for bypolls
India needs to review its strategy on free trade agreements
Interplay between globalisation and nationalism has transformed right wing politics
Markets
Cash market turnover dips to 7-month low, marking sharpest decline since March
Technical Picks: BALRAMCHIN, Fortis, ICICI Bank, BEL.
Shishir Asthana
Moneycontrol Pro