Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Monday, Oct 29, 2007
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version

Clasic Farm

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Mutual Funds
Markets - Performance
Columns - Mutual Confidence
No point in staying with a laggard for far too long

Nilanjan Dey

Quite a few mutual funds turn out pedestrian performance

It is true that the equity market has done pretty much well in the last few years. It is true that long-term investors in stocks are more or less a satisfied lot. It is also true that equity funds of all hues had given fairly decent returns in the recent past. Why then, in this feel-good world, are some sections so obviously disheartened – so clearly unhappy with the kind of returns they have got?

To find the answer to that question, you need not go far. Just check out some of the laggards and the performance they have delivered over three or even five years. Take, for instance, the list of laggards that Value Research so diligently turns out every month. Considering a three-year period (as of September 30), UTI Master Value and LIC MF Equity have both given a modest 30 per cent. Actually, it is even less, but for the sake of simplicity, we will stick to this number. And, that’s not all, given the fact that Birla Dividend Yield Plus, Birla India Opportunities and LIC MF Growth have all given barely more than 30 per cent.

Now, before that figure shocks you more, consider the pedestrian performance dished out over a five-year period by the hikes of UTI MNC, Birla MNC and Kotak MNC. In each case, the score is in the 34-39 per cent range. This, when the best products have given their investors a lot more during this stretch.

Stock-picking strategy

Why does a fund fail to impress when the leading players in its category have handed out superlative performances in comparison? Clearly, the fund manager concerned has slipped up on his stock-picking strategy. (It will pay to remember have that there may be some genuine reasons – MNC stocks are not doing too well lately, and this has impacted MNC funds too. Ditto for dividend yield funds, which have mostly turned out abysmal scores in recent times).

Let us now turn our attention to some of the surprises – we are not necessarily referring to the chart busters of the day. Instead, we are talking about some ‘unique products – their singularity derived from the investment themes they nurture. And it so happens that these are decent performers too.

Here’s a small list (in no particular order) of such funds for you: SBI Magnum COMMA, Sundaram BNP Paribas CAPEX Opportunities, DSP Merrill Lynch T.I.G.E.R., Standard Chartered Premier Equity and JM Basic. Several others could have made it to this list, but we are not mentioning all of them here. Coming back to our main topic, the question we wish to ask is this: is there a special reason why investors should stay with any of the poor-performers any longer? While past performance is not strictly a major determinant, we think the answer is a loud No. There is no point in staying with a laggard for far too long, forever hoping that good times will come soon.

Feedback may be sent to nilanjan@thehindu.co.in

More Stories on : Mutual Funds | Performance | Mutual Confidence

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



PNB Hiring

Stories in this Section
BSNL to hire cell towers from private operators


‘Global operations will nourish Jet’s domestic biz’
Rising rupee helps some companies shore up profits
Insurers put riders on corporate health covers
No point in staying with a laggard for far too long
ONGC lines up Rs 7,750 cr to revamp onshore assets
Ratnagiri Gas equity structure in for change
Today's Pick: Nestle India (Rs 1331.95)
Day trading guide
Nokia Siemens, Qualcomm differ on mobile TV tech
Companies seek foreign architects for standout designs
NComputing sees huge market here for terminals
Job-hoppers not counted out by TCS
Gold vulnerable to short-term correction
Role and risks of sovereign wealth funds
Cues from RBI, US Fed keenly watched
Video conferencing becoming the norm
Green signal for triple-stacks on diesel routes


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line