Where Mutual Funds are lacking for Equity Investors?
Are mutual funds as lucrative for
HNI investors, as they used to be?
Mutual fund
investment has increasingly become a popular investment tool recently.
With the retail investors entering the domain and stricter regulations from
SEBI, is a mutual fund as lucrative for HNI investors, as it used to
be? Here are the major drawbacks of mutual funds that HNI investors
must be aware of, going forward.
Facts about equity mutual fund, investors must be aware of:-
Behavioural
Flows – This is among the major drawback
of mutual funds. As the retail investors have started investing in the
mutual funds, these are highly impacted by the behavioural flows of the
uninformed investors. The ‘Loss Aversion Bias’ highly impacts these new
investors. They act in haste to prevent short term losses and withdraw the
money when the market falls. Exiting the investment at this stage, when
conversely, the informed HNI investors add more funds, leads to losses for the entire
pool. Hence, the strategy of the HNI investors fails to play out. Over longer
time frames, the stock market tends to recover eventually but the reduction in
the funds does not allow the fund manager to make an investment when the opportunity
arises.
Additionally, the retail investors are also affected by the ‘Action Bias’. These investors invest for short term gains. The action bias forces them to constantly tweak their portfolio by taking profits too frequently and redeeming for short term goal fulfilment. On the other hand, HNIs tend to invest in a longer-term but are unable to make equivalent profits due to such behavioural flows.
Additionally, the retail investors are also affected by the ‘Action Bias’. These investors invest for short term gains. The action bias forces them to constantly tweak their portfolio by taking profits too frequently and redeeming for short term goal fulfilment. On the other hand, HNIs tend to invest in a longer-term but are unable to make equivalent profits due to such behavioural flows.
Restrictive
Latitude of Stock Universe – To protect the interests of the retail
investors, broad investment guidelines have been laid down by SEBI on target
universe of stocks for mutual funds. Clear definition of what constitutes
the small, mid and large cap stocks has been given. Also, the portion of the
fund’s assets that can be invested in these categories has been specified by
SEBI. This restricts the judgment of the fund manager. Also, while it makes the
investment less risky, it restricts maximum potential performance.
Allocation
per stock / per sector – As per the directions
given by SEBI, a mutual fund manager is not allowed to invest more
than 10% of the portfolio in a single company. Hence, while a standalone
investor may reap higher gains by investing more in a stock that grows over
time, a mutual fund is limited by 10% of the portfolio amount. There are caps
on the exposure that can be taken by a scheme to a particular group, sector or
security.
Over –
Diversification – While diversification in
a mutual fund investment is beneficial as it averages the risks of
loss, the same tends to dilute returns for informed equity investors who
clearly invest with long term horizon. A minimum level of diversification has
been set by SEBI, as stated above, which lowers the risks and the potential for
higher gains as well.
Scheme
categorization + Allocation limits + Min diversification limits = Less
flexibility for fund manager to operate and show out – performance by way of
picking companies outside of the universe.
Investment is
all about making informed decisions. When one goes for equity and also makes up
mind for investing with 5 to 10 years of horizon or more, one deserves maximum
potential return. This is where a well-researched concentrated style of
investing generates better performance. This is where mutual funds lack over Portfolio Management Services.
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