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A Mutual fund is a wonderful financial instrument for people who have
neither the time nor the inclination to test their understanding of the stock
market. It helps people with a very small amount of money to diversify their
portfolio to minimize the risk. But even then quite often amateurs easily
outperform many mutual funds.
In fact in the long run most of the mutual funds underperform in
comparison to their respective benchmark index.
As Peter Lynch says, this is not because of the inability of the fund
managers, but it is the inherent fear of losing. Success is one thing, but it
is more important not to look bad if you fail. Managers are quite aware that if
they lose even 20-30% of investors’ money on a company like Reliance, people
will question Reliance for its failure than the manager to predict such
movement. But a 10% loss on IFCI could call for reasoning behind such an
investment. It is better to fail on conventional stocks to keep the job safe
than to try unconventional stocks and bring the job in jeopardy. This is the
reason why most of the fund managers keep looking for reasons not to buy
exciting stocks.
The other issue with a mutual fund is the fee that management charges
to their investors for managing their fund. An entry load of 2.25% brings
down the returns by a significant level and again the exit load (In case of
most of the mutual funds) of 2.25% further takes away return from the
investors. According to Buffet, in Wall-Street, such management fund causes
mutual funds giving less than 80% of return in comparison to the index funds.
Another hurdle with a mutual fund is the regulation imposed by the
monitoring authority like Security and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). The
upper cap of stake on a particular stock forces fund managers to look for some
less attractive stocks than to increase stake on stocks which are bound to give
better returns. Specially, in the case of Small-Cap, size prevents the fund
manager from buying in such companies, because it is not possible to buy enough
shares to have noticeable improvement in fund’s performance.
In the situation, one of the alternatives that investors could think of
is putting money in index funds, which do not need any management and hence can
save the entry and exit load. Index funds are kind of exchange traded fund,
where individuals’ money is put in different constituents on the index in
proportion to their weight in the index. For example the index fund of NIFTY
consists of 50 stocks which are constituent of S&P CNX NIFTY, and the money
invested in this index-fund is proportionally distributed among these 50
stocks.One can also look for funds which have outperformed the index
consistently in past 3 to 5 years. There are a few good mutual-funds which have
beaten the index by a significant difference and hence preferred even after the
management fee. More importantly, an individual needs to look at the
fund-managers’ performance rather than the funds’ performance. As a change of
management could lead to a change in ideology and can have an impact on returns
to investors as well.
Submitted by- Abhishek Gupta and Saurav Kumar
Source – Finmanac - http://finmanac.blogspot.com/
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