Quarterly review – changes in Prime Funds, our mutual fund recommendations

If you have noticed the portfolios of dynamic asset allocation funds with a fundamental-only driven model, you will see them sporting net equity holdings of under 40% now. In a market where over 40% of the stocks have a price earnings ratio of over 50 times or no PE at all (i.e., the company is loss-making), dynamic asset allocation funds can draw little comfort in holding higher allocation to equity. 

But what about equity funds that don’t have the luxury of moving away from equity even if valuations are discomforting? They either go with the market wave (read: momentum) or stick to what they know best – hold high quality stocks with sound metrics but less fancied in a bull market. The latter approach can result in paying a price – underperformance. 

Which one of these a fund opts for is based on the fund manager’s conviction (plus the kind of pressure he/she faces from the fund house to deliver!).

changes in Prime Funds

Bull market underperformance

When a bull market extends, defying fundamentals and driven largely by liquidity, portfolios that are designed strictly by fundamentals tend to underperform. If your otherwise sound mutual fund holdings have underperformed in recent quarters, this will likely be the primary reason. 

In this quarterly review, we could see both of the above play out. Funds that were severe underperformers turned the corner with jaw-dropping returns, either because their long-underperforming stocks suddenly started moving up or these funds joined the ‘momentum party’. A few others that were otherwise consistently in the top quartile, took sharp hits and trailed their index or peers by a significant margin in the past 1-2 quarters. 

These will be times for you to wait, not because it is a virtue but because it will likely keep you sane in this dizzying market. In line with the waiting game, we have little to no changes in our primary picks in Prime Funds. However, we have added some themes that might interest you. We have also called out funds where you would have seen pronounced underperformance, and let you know what to do.

About Prime Funds

If you are new to PrimeInvestor, this is what you need to know about Prime Funds: 

Prime Funds is our list of best mutual funds across equity, debt, and hybrid categories. We use Prime Ratings, our fund ratings, as a first filter and then use qualitative analysis to design our fund recommendations. Prime Funds is an enduring list of funds that you can use, and you will find a fund that meets any goal you’re looking to meet. 

Different categories: Prime Funds are separated into buckets, based on risk level in equity & hybrid funds, and timeframe in debt funds. Each of these draws from different SEBI-defined categories but we have classified them in a more user-friendly way than using the several dozens of SEBI categories. We do not go only by Prime Ratings but look at other factors as well to narrow the list and make the choices easy for you. 

Different styles: In Prime Funds, we’ve aimed at providing funds that follow different strategies for you to mix styles and diversify your portfolio with ease. The ‘Why this fund’ for each Prime Fund will brief its strategy, why we picked it, and how to use it in your portfolio.

Direct plans: We have specifically given the direct plans in Prime Funds. If you wish to know whether it is ok for you to use the regular plan, where we have a ‘buy,’ check our MF Review Tool (not our Ratings page). If the tool specifically calls out ‘buy through direct,’ it means that the expense ratio differential is high under the regular plan for that fund. You will be better off using the direct plan in such cases. You can also check the expense ratio differential using our new expense ratio tool.

Review: Our aim in reviewing the Prime Funds list every quarter is to ensure that we don’t miss any good opportunities that are coming up and we are not holding on to funds that are slipping. When we remove funds from the Prime Funds list, we tell you exactly what to do if you have invested in these funds. Funds we remove do not immediately call for a sell – it is just that they have slipped in performance marginally or there are better alternatives now. Unless our review tool says such funds are a ‘sell’, you can hold them (refer to our article on when to sell funds)

Using Prime Funds: You don’t need to hold every Prime Fund nor add any new fund we introduce to the list. Unless it fits your overall portfolio/strategy, or there is something lacking, there is little need for you to go on adding funds. Our idea of covering them in detail through some of our weekly calls is to let you know the strategy, style, and suitability in different portfolios. It is not a specific call to buy right away, unless we mention that it is a ‘tactical’ or ‘timing’ call.

We will now move to the changes we have done this quarter and what you should do about them.

Changes in equity funds

#1 Change in passive fund classification

Up until now, we listed passive funds under a distinct classification. This set of funds were a mix of large-cap, multi-cap and mid-cap indices, not to mention global indices or differentiated strategies. From now, we are removing this separate section and re-classifying these funds under the Equity – Moderate and Equity – Aggressive categories, based on the nature of the index. That is, the Equity – Moderate and Equity – Aggressive sections will each have two subsections – Active and Passive. 

The reason for this reclassification is that one, you know what risk to expect from each of the index funds. While this was already explained under the ‘Why this fund’ explanation we give, putting it under the relevant Moderate/ Aggressive buckets makes it much clearer for you. Two, it helps you compare and choose between an active fund and a passive fund in each of these risk buckets, and use the passive funds in the right way for your portfolio. Three, it helps clear up the confusion that many of you seem to have in treating index funds as a separate allocation in your portfolio instead of considering it as part of your moderate or high-risk allocations.

#2 Fund addition in Equity – moderate: Passive

The Nifty Low Volatility 30 is an index that is built by considering the stocks with the least volatility in the Nifty 100. We have had the ICICI Pru Nifty Low Vol 30 ETF for a long while now in our ETF recommendations. The AMC a few months ago introduced the fund option for this index, where it will invest in its ETF. 

This fund is the ICICI Pru Nifty Low Vol 30 ETF FoF. We have added this index fund to the Equity Moderate – Passive category. The index scores in keeping downsides contained, which helps in longer-term outperformance against the Nifty 100 index. We have covered the performance and suitability of the ICICI Pru Nifty Low Vol 30 in detail in earlier reports.

#3 Fund addition in Equity – Aggressive: Active

In this category, we added ICICI Pru India Opportunities fund, a thematic fund that seeks to generate returns by investing in opportunities that arise from special situations. By adding this fund, we strayed from our norm in two ways: one, we added a thematic fund in the Equity Aggressive category instead of the thematic bucket. Two, we added an active fund that did not cross our minimum track record cut-off. 

The reason for such a departure is as follows: First, despite being classified as thematic funds under SEBI’s rules, ICICI Pru India Opportunities fund’s portfolio is quite diversified, as the ‘special situations’ theme can be played across market cap segments and sectors. The definition of special situations is quite broad as well. Such situations could be in the form of regulatory or policy changes, corporate restructuring, company going through a rough patch due to challenges in the industry or internally and expected to come out of it. It can thus be a good multi-cap diversifier in a portfolio.

Second, at a time when the market is peppered with ‘special situations’ be it on the regulatory front, or individual companies facing challenges, we did not want to wait till the fund develops a ‘track record.’ Third, the fund has a value bias that comes from owning stocks that are facing challenges, which provides comfort on the valuation front. We also find this fund doing better than many other thematic funds with a similar strategy in its performance so far. 

The fund is a high-risk option, with the risks stemming from both its theme and the limited track record. The fund is suitable only for long-term portfolios of 7 years or above and should not form more than 5-10% of your portfolio. This cannot be a substitute for mid or small-cap funds in the Equity -aggressive category. We may also decide to take more active calls in the fund, when required. Investments can be in lumpsum or SIP with restricted exposure.

#4 Fund additions in Strategy/ thematic

We added two funds here. The first is DSP Healthcare. It is true that we missed the early rally in pharma when it began in end-2019 (we had not launched our research platform then). We never had the courage to pick the segment again given where valuations stood and the rally that took off. Now, with the sector cooling off a shade in the past 3-6 months, we see some opportunity to get in. 

DSP Healthcare is a sector fund that seeks to take exposure to both domestic and global healthcare (up to 25%) stocks. It is among the more diversified healthcare funds with an additional edge of exposure to US-based healthcare stocks. It focuses on medical device companies in the US as opportunities in this space are few in India. To give some background, the US Medical Equipment Index has a lower correlation to the Indian BSE Healthcare index. The fund itself is relatively new and does not have sufficient track record to assess performance, but currently competes well with similar top sector funds from Nippon India and Mirae Asset AMCs. The US diversification adds to the DSP fund’s uniqueness. 

As a sector fund, it needs a high risk appetite. Exposure should be curtailed to 5% of your portfolio. Consider averaging over a 6–12-month period at least as the relatively high valuations in this sector can cause a correction if liquidity dries up. Else, invest more on dips if you are an active observer of the markets. The fund needs a minimum time frame of 5-7 years. 

The second fund is Nippon India Consumption. The consumption theme is a relatively more secular one, and consumption appears to be reviving after the lockdown-hit slump. The relatively more ‘defensive’ nature of the core consumer stocks, such as FMCG, also lend some heft to the theme. 

Outside of FMCG, though, consumption extends to several sectors. Media, entertainment, financial services, recreation, home improvement, automobiles, retail, and much more all fall under the consumption theme.

Nippon India Consumption is among the older funds in the consumer theme. It compares well with other consumption funds across metrics. The fund’s portfolio is an eclectic mix of stocks across consumption pockets. While its top holdings are more concentrated, especially towards FMCG stocks, the fund is still well-diversified. 

Our other recommendation in this theme is BNP Paribas India Consumption. The Nippon fund is less reliant on financial exposure than the BNP fund and sports somewhat more direct consumer plays. You can invest in either of the funds, and the theme can be held for the longer term as well.

#5 Fund removal in Strategy/ thematic

We have removed UTI MNC from our theme bucket in this review. The MNC theme is among the poor performing themes in this bull rally and it didn’t help that some of the FMCG, IT MNCs in UTI MNC’s basket delivered tame returns. We had introduced this fund in this category anticipating a market correction as MNC funds hold up well in such market phases. However, this scenario did not play out. We think you will be better off taking fresh exposure to other diversified strategies than miss the rally, while it lasts. 

Stop SIPs, if any in the fund but continue to hold investments made so far as this can still help contain downsides in the event of a correction. Fresh lumpsum investments can be avoided as well.

#6 Taking note of underperformance

As we explained at the outset of this report, several funds that were otherwise consistently at the top have slid lower as previous underperformers served up stellar returns.

One of these is Kotak Flexicap which has lingered below the Nifty 500 TRI since about August last year. The reasons remain that top picks have not been the outperformers in this rally. These stocks are otherwise sound and do fit the fund’s ‘value’ bias, such as Larsen & Toubro or Bharat Electronics. Others, such as Hindustan Unilever are more defensive bets that can help should markets take a breather. The fund has got several calls right, such as picking up Infosys and ICICI Bank, or cement stocks or steel plays.

Given the nature of the market rally and the uncertain position it is in now, against the fund’s strategy and portfolio, we’re still inclined to wait it out with this fund. The underperformance has not worsened, suggesting that there is an attempt to turn performance around. Shorter-term returns over periods such as 1 month and 3 months show that the fund is trying to improve, with some periods of outperformance over the index; this is yet to firmly sustain. That said, performance may yet take time to fully move back above the index unless the market scenario changes very quickly. 

The other is DSP Midcap, which has an even starker 1-year underperformance over its benchmark and peers. What we said in the beginning of this report applies well to this fund. DSP Midcap missed the bull rally by staying away from stocks that shot up – and a good number with inferior financial metrics or business fundamentals. If you ran a screener on this fund’s portfolio, you would find that the fund has not compromised on quality or growth metrics.

The rally over the past year was driven by commodities, value stocks some power ad capital good stocks and select cyclical stocks. DSP Midcap did not own these meaningfully and had marginally underweight exposure to financials (which it has mostly bridged now). And those it owned, be it Federal Bank or City Union Bank did not perform. What seems right about its portfolio is that it holds stocks with sound balance sheet and a healthy earnings growth – although they simply refuse to gain from the current liquidity-driven bull rally. 

While the fund still manages to keep itself above its benchmark on a rolling-3-year return basis, its 1-year performance may leave you worried. We observe from rolling 1-month returns that the margin of underperformance over the index is reducing in recent times. While we are confident that a correcting market will quickly bring this fund back in form, we may otherwise have to watch for a few more quarters to see if the fund is able to course correct.  You can continue staying invested in the fund until we have any update.

The summary of the funds added and removed is below.

Changes in debt funds

We have made no changes in debt funds for the following reasons. 

First,  at this time, the direction the debt market will take is uncertain. The tug-of-war between inflation, interest rates markets expect, and the RBI’s efforts to prevent rates from rising too much and hurt growth persists. 

Second, the funds we recommend across time-frames are among the best in their categories. We find few options outside these that are consistent enough in terms of strategy or portfolio to merit an inclusion, especially given the uncertainty over where and how much rates can move. 

Third, the narrowing spreads between top-rated debt and government debt also don’t offer much in terms of new fund opportunities. To ensure you get decent returns in these uncertain times, we have cautiously added a credit risk fund as part of our debt longer-term recommendations. In shorter-term recommendations, we have included funds that take marginal, controlled risks to offer better returns.

Fourth, with the increase in the bank deposit insurance and the sweeping changes in the way the deposit insurance works, high-returning deposits of the smaller and/or riskier banks become attractive propositions. In the shorter-term timeframes, these deposits become especially competitive compared to debt funds.

In the debt space, therefore, note the following points:

  • Where there are specific pockets of opportunities, we will issue calls on these. Our recent highlighting of the opportunity in SDLs and ways to play them are an example. We will continue to look for such higher yields that you can lock into, especially if rates turn lower making specific target-maturity funds/ETFs attractive.
  • You can include short-maturity funds (3 months to 1.5 years and 1.5-3 years buckets in Prime Funds) in your portfolio, even if you have a long-term horizon. These funds are the best-suited at times when rates are uncertain as they will reflect any change quickly.
  • Do not exit your longer-term debt funds. They are not wrong funds to hold, provided you have the right timeframe for it. These funds will simply take longer to reflect any rise in interest rates. They will be low-returning in the short term. You need to hold through this period. If you have additional surplus to invest, you can choose to add short-maturity funds if you’re concerned over the current low yields.
  • In the above context, we’d like to make note of SBI Magnum Constant Maturity, part of our 5+ year Prime Funds bucket. This fund’s double-digit returns have dwindled down to less than 5% for the past year. This is not a worrying trend, and comes as the duration rally peters out. As the likelihood of further rate cuts fade – the 10-year Government bond yields have moved to 6.3%-levels this year from the sub-6% levels they were earlier. High returns from these funds is not the norm. Constant maturity funds will go through phases of underperformance as the rate cycle transitions out of a downward phase. The reason for including constant maturity funds in long-term portfolios is simply to cushion equity risks, avoid risks of a fund taking wrong duration or credit calls, and offer a fuss-free, semi-passive, long-term debt component.
  • You can add on fixed deposits that offer higher rates to supplement your fixed income allocation. We have updated Prime Deposits to include such options, so do refer for recommendations. If you already are interested in any bank’s deposit programme, run a check on its financial health using our Bank FD tool before zeroing in.

Finally, a short note on our Prime ETFs, our ETF recommendations. We have made no significant changes in ETFs. We have removed one ETF only – ICICI Pru S&P BSE 500 ETF. The ETF had poor trading volumes, though it still kept tracking error controlled. Volumes were improving, until the trend took a turn over the past few months. The 3-month average traded value was just about Rs 13 lakh a day. This makes it hard to deploy investments, and therefore we have pulled it out of the recommended list until we see a steady improvement in volumes. If you already hold the ETF, continuing holding as tracking error is low. If you still wish to make additional investments in the ETF, spread it out over several days and invest small amounts only each time.

The Prime Funds list can be accessed here.

The Prime ETFs list can be accessed here.

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31 thoughts on “Quarterly review – changes in Prime Funds, our mutual fund recommendations”

  1. Dear Madam,
    I am investing in ICICI Pru Nifty Low Vol 30 ETF FoF as a small case of Rs. 2000 per month ever since you initially suggested. Is it advisable to invest in the same as lumpsum now ?

    regards

    Rgs

    1. It depends on the amount of lumpsum investment you’re making. If it’s not more than say 5-7% of your total portfolio, then it’s fine. – thanks,
      Bhavana

  2. Hi,
    DSP Healthcare fund has barely three years of track record, and the fund Manager Aditya Khemka, a healthcare Specialist fund manager with DSP, exited the AMC last year. Don’t you think it will affect the fund’s performance and the fact that the current CIO Vinit Sambre, who is managing this fund along with  DSP Midcap, Small fund, focus fund, and top 100 funds are not doing that well?
    There have been frequent changes in the fund management team at DSP in the last 3 years. Will it not effect the fund’s performance.

    1. It’s over 3 quarters now. The fund has a process it place and the intl. exposure also interests us. If you are an IFA, do try having a call with them to understand the process. it might interest you. regards, Vidya

  3. Hi… Earlier, you removed Invesco India Growth Opportunities Fund and now, you have DSP Midcap Fund under ‘review’ for poor performance in recent few quarters (that, when market defies all logic – liquidity & valuation much ahead of fundamentals). Not only do both funds have excellent long term RR records but good downside capture ratio too. Frequent changes in portfolio, based on short term performance, doesn’t augment well for portfolio health.

    Would not funds with excellent long term performance deserve a longer time frame review then a few quarters of performance lag w.r.t. peers & category? (PGIM Midcap Opportunities fund can well be a case study of run away success due to recent 4 to 6 quarter surges but otherwise very poor performance over longer term and especially in bearish market)

    I am not questioning your wisdom but trying to broaden my understanding :). Please explain.
    Regards… Jatin

    1. 🙂 Good question. We also queries asking the exact opposite! But, to answer your question…one, a very long fund underperformance, at a time when markets are rallying, means losing a lot of opportunity. Though downside containment is very important, participating in gains is also one of the reasons to invest in equities, and where good returns come from. Two, a long underperformance will make it harder for a fund to recoup the losses and if markets are not conducive, it gets even more difficult. So if a fund fails to pick up, continually investing in it on the faith of past record will mean compromising portfolio returns for you – and that makes it harder for you as well. Such underperforming funds need watching to see if there are signs of a turnaround, which then makes it fine to continue investing – that’s why we tell you also what to do with investments in Prime Funds we remove – hold, exit, stop SIP etc. We have seen plenty of funds over the years that were once good that have entirely lost.

      So we do give the benefit of long-term performance and the nature of fund before we take calls – but we also need to balance return for investors. It’s a tough call to take 🙂 – thanks, Bhavana

      1. Lemme reframe the question … How many back-to-back quarters of poor performance w.r.t. category average returns would suffice to classify a fund with excellent long term performance (3 & 5 years on RR basis) as a poor performer?

        Regards .. Jatin

        1. There is unfortunately no hard-and-fast rule on this. It’s a factor of both how much the fund lags peers/index and for how long, and whether this is in the shorter-term or longer-term period. Generally speaking, about 3-4 quarters of steady underperformance compared to index is a cause for watching. But again, there are several qualitative aspects to it. – thanks, Bhavana

  4. Hello there !

    Thanks for the updates and the rationale behind some of the funds.
    1. I have one question in relation to the sectoral healthcare fund selected – What sets DSP Healthcare fund apart from the “Edelweiss MSCI India Domestic & World Healthcare 45 Index Fund” . Both of these funds have global advantage and DSP has a higher expense ratio of 0.8% in the direct plan.
    2. Also, I’ve found the various tools and calculators available on your site to be of massive value. A suggestion would be to have some calculator which can tell us the best way to reduce STCG/LTCG based on uploading the CAMS statement of MF portfolio. I just filed the returns and struggled through the process. So , I though that would be a good addition and value to your readers .

    Thanks very much !

    Regards,
    Akhil

    1. 1. The DSP fund can pick the stocks that can do well. The passive fund index goes by market cap weights – which can also mean that stock-specific opportunities in the pharma space can be missed. There is a good amount of diversity within the sector and there are different trends and stocks that can do well. On the global front, the DSP fund looks for opportunities that are not here, so it may not simply go for the larger healthcare players that the index would. The passive fund would suit only those who want to play the pharma space but do not want the risk of stock-specific calls going wrong.
      2. Thanks for the suggestion, we’ll see what we can do.

      Thanks, Bhavana

  5. One question – Any particular reason for recommending ICICI low vol fof, instead of alpha low vol fof? As per your earlier article, alpha low vol seems to be a better index. You mentioned its downside capture ratio to be 56% while that of low vol was 69%. Return wise, it is clearly the better of two at any time period.

    1. We don’t have enough data for tracking error of the Alpha Low Vol. We also need to see if the FoF improves volumes for the ETF. We’ll take a relook in the next quarter. This in any case does not make the Low Vol itself a poor choice. – thanks, Bhavana

  6. I look forward to this quarterly review, as a compass for my investments! Thanks!

    Will be also looking forward to your review of Edelweiss Nifty quality 30 esp as compared to nifty low vol 30.

    Regarding special situations fund, the axis one seems to play safe and hold to large caps like hdfc. How to know the difference between statement and execution?

    1. You mean the ETF? We’re very unlikely to review the Quality 30…it has very low volumes, for one. And two, the Quality index as such doesn’t offer a convincing alternative to the parent index, in terms of performance. – thanks, Bhavana

  7. The link to the ICICI Pru India Opportunities fund in the above article doesn’t work. The page says “- Unexpected control character found”

  8. Hi,
    What do you’ll think about large cap funds – I see a couple on your list.
    Probability of alpha generation seems to have gone down post regulatory changes – Index/Large-cap oriented Flexi would be a better choice?

    1. We’ve discussed this in earlier articles – some are below. While the market situation has certainly changed from when we first wrote on it, the general trend has not. The recent market rally has seen large-caps outperform, but the longer-term returns are still sub-par and we need to see if outperformance sustains.
      https://primeinvestor.in/large-cap-funds-are-losing-the-appeal/
      https://primeinvestor.in/why-were-avoiding-some-of-the-iconic-large-cap-funds/
      https://primeinvestor.in/multi-cap-funds-are-getting-less-risky/
      Thanks, Bhavana

  9. Does this mean that we should stop our SIP for now ?
    These will be times for you to wait, not because it is a virtue but because it will likely keep you sane in this dizzying market.

    1. That was in reference to the nature of fund performance and which funds to go for. If you wish to stop SIPs because of the market itself, it is your call. – thanks, Bhavana

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