Most of us like to try out new things whether its dining at
restaurants, buying mobile phones and cars to name a few. Some
go to the extent of changing mobile phones every 1 year and
a car every 3 years. Well this is a matter of personal preference
and lifestyle and might give you some kind of emotional happiness
which is good in some sense.
But when it comes to most new funds, there is hardly anything
different, unique or really NEW about it. It's just that the
name gets more exotic, dressing gets much better or a new marketing
ploy such as Invest in India's Growth potential as if other
options available are not investing in India's growth potential.
To put it simply most of the new fund offers are Old Wine in
a New Bottle. They are packaged very smartly with fancy marketing
ideas to entice the client to buy. There was a deluge of New
Fund Offers in 2005 and early part of 2006.
SEBI on its part took a series of steps. Firstly, SEBI objected
against the use of the word IPO and instead had every fund house
use NFO (New Fund Offer), to confuse with Stock IPOs, to curb
rampant mis-selling of new funds.
Secondly, SEBI had Mutual Funds launching open-ended New Funds
charge the initial issue expenses within the entry load itself
whereas close ended funds could still charge 6% initial issue
expense.
This is precisely one of the reasons why most of the mutual
funds have been launching closed ended New Fund Offers so they
could pay a higher brokerage of around 5 to 6% to distributors.
Thirdly, SEBI has taken note of this deluge of similar funds
being launched and made it mandatory for the trustees of Mutual
Funds to personally certify that their new schemes are different
from the old ones. Despite this some of the fund houses have
been launching me too schemes.
Some fund houses such as DSP Merrill Lynch have not launched
any new offering in the last 12-15 months, except for the Super
SIP (which was a genuine attempt to offer something new that
was relevant), whereas others such as Tata Mutual Fund and SBI
Mutual Fund have been strong contenders for the Top Slot in
the New Fund Euphoria.
So the question boils down to "How does then one decide if
the New Fund Offer of the so many being launched every other
month is suitable for me".
Before answering this question, first
3 Common Mistakes all investor should be aware of:
(a) Too less or Too many aren't good enough
I have seen many investors having anywhere between 16-85 funds
or some who have just one or two. Having too many in the name
of diversification is no good and in fact defeats the very purpose
of diversification.
After all the one of the reasons you opt for a mutual fund
is to diversify your investments but having all large cap funds
in your portfolio is unlikely to do any good.
At best based on the size of your portfolio, spread your investments
across in 4-9 different funds spread across different Mutual
Funds, fund managers, investing styles, expense ratios, portfolio
turnover, market capitalization and whether its an all equity,
balanced, or tax planning fund. Give Sectoral funds a complete
miss unless you are very bullish on the sector and understand
the risks well.
(b) Rs. 10 NAV is not cheaper than Rs.100 NAV
What you should be concerned about is the% fall or% rise. A
Re. 1 fall in a NAV 10 fund is the equivalent of Rs.10 fall
in a NAV 100 fund. In fact Rs.100 means proven competence and
a long track record of capital appreciation.
(c) Don't fall for fancy terms
Don't fall for fancy and general terms such as Investing in
India's growth potential, Options and Derivatives to diversify
your portfolio. See if there are any existing funds with longer
track records with similar investment objectives & strategies.
If there are, opt for the tried and tested ones rather than
going from newer exotic ones.
How to decide if the New Fund
is an appropriate one for you?
Take a look at your Financial Plan if you have one or at your
existing portfolio. What kind of funds do I have in my
existing portfolio? Are they large cap funds, mid cap funds,
flexi cap funds, balanced funds, tax planning funds?
The next to see is how does this new fund really add value
to my existing portfolio? How does this New Fund fit into my
portfolio, my asset allocation, and help achieve my goals? This
is a million-dollar question.
Is this really a New Fund with an interesting theme that might
fit well within my portfolio? Understand the investment objective,
strategy and asset allocation of the fund. What has been the
fund manager's track record of managing other schemes? Which
are the other schemes managed by this fund manager? How have
they performed in the past? Especially what has been his previous
funds performance during tough times like the May 2006 mayhem,
2000 crash etc.
How stable is the investment team of the fund house and how
many schemes are they managing? What is their track record of
launching new funds? If the fund house is notorious for launching
new schemes once every 2-3 months, you will be better off skipping
such schemes or fund houses altogether. If after doing this,
you still cannot figure out if you should opt for the new scheme,
seek the advice of your financial advisor.
Just look at the track record of the some of the New Fund Offers
launched in the last 12-18 months and compare with the some
of the existing funds with a 5-10 year track record (marked
in yellow)
| Returns as on 01-Sep-2006 |
| Scheme |
3 mth |
6 mth |
1 yr |
2 yr |
3 yr |
5 yr |
| Reliance
Vision (G) |
11.82 |
7.31 |
44.21 |
53.98 |
51.48 |
62.11 |
| Franklin
India Bluechip (G) |
13.78 |
7.18 |
44.06 |
48.20 |
46.37 |
43.03 |
| SBI
Magnum Sector Umbrella - Contra (G) |
7.20 |
9.01 |
42.86 |
63.98 |
41.58 |
42.16 |
| HDFC Premier
Multi-Cap Fund (G) |
10.14 |
2.08 |
28.93 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| Birla Gen
Next Fund (G) |
9.89 |
-1.37 |
24.28 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| UTI Contra
Fund (G) |
5.59 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| Tata Contra
Fund (G) |
7.72 |
1.02 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| Prudential
ICICI Fusion Fund (G) |
0.70 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| HSBC Advantage
India Fund (G) |
7.39 |
0.68 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| Birla Top
100 Fund (G) |
12.22 |
6.03 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| ABN AMRO
Future Leaders Fund (G) |
-1.42 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
| ABN AMRO
Dividend Yield Fund (G) |
-1.43 |
-12.69 |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
N.A |
We can arrive at the conclusion that indeed existing funds
have surpassed newer ones by a mile and we would be much better
off sticking to existing funds with excellent track records
than running after fancy terms, names & themes.
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