Should you invest in balanced advantage funds now?

If you watched any cricket in the past few days, you could not have missed the ad from a prominent fund house, extolling the virtues of (their) balanced advantage funds. These funds seem to be the new must-have these days. Whether its AMCs, fund managers, media, or your neighbour, the advice is that the best way to manage current markets and protect your returns is to add a balanced advantage/ dynamic asset allocation fund to your portfolio. So, should you?

If a product were simple, it easy to answer this question. But if a product does asset allocation, promises to dynamically manage such allocation based on market conditions and promises less falls, then the question becomes:

  • Does this fit into your time frame?
  • Does it gel with your own asset allocation?
  • Does it suit your return requirement?

Letโ€™s break it down. Please note that when we say balanced advantage funds, we’re including dynamic asset allocation funds as well.

The role of balanced advantage funds

We have explained in detail earlier about what balanced advantage funds do. Weโ€™re not delving into that aspect. Weโ€™ll instead explore what these funds bring to a portfolio.

The primary role these funds play is to limit the extent to which your overall portfolio returns can fall in a correcting market and reduce overall portfolio volatility. These funds fit this role as they are not invested entirely in equity, and hedge equity through derivatives and debt. The levels of debt, derivatives and unhedged equity are decided based on each AMCโ€™s in-house valuation models. If markets are overheated, then funds hedge their portfolios more (less of cash equities) do the reverse when valuations are attractive. Therefore, this seems like the perfect recipe given where markets are now and if youโ€™re worried about corrections.

Now for a reality check.

#1 Each fund differs in its call on market direction

The level of hedging and debt exposure varies widely between funds. There is no uniformity in the category or on their calls on valuations. In December 2020, for example, unhedged equity ranges from less than 25% to over 70% (see table below). A fund may be very aggressive, conservative or somewhere in between.

Two, you have no way of knowing what allocations the fund is going to make in any given month or market cycle, and nor do you have any control over it. So, while you may think markets are overvalued, the fund may well continue to be aggressive. The table below shows how much allocations vary, both between funds and over the months.

Three, the fund can also change strategies based on markets, return potential, and their own models. For example, we had a balanced advantage fund in our Hybrid – Low Risk category in Prime Funds; we added it here because the fund was among the most consistent in containing downsides and was not overtly aggressive. We then had to move it to Hybrid โ€“ Moderate Risk because the fund was getting more aggressive and was therefore not doing as well as others in limiting declines or containing volatility.

#2 Balanced advantage funds can fall, and fall sharply.

A big reason you want to go for a balanced advantage fund now is because youโ€™re worried about market falls and valuations. But know this โ€“ just because a fund hedges does not mean that it will not fall. Further, given the differences in hedged/debt exposure, there are stark differences in how much balanced advantage funds fall. An aggressive fund will see higher volatility and steeper falls.

This apart, valuations become attractive in falling markets. These funds are therefore going to increase equity in corrections, which means that they are also going to dip. If you got into these funds thinking that they will stay strong as markets correct, that may not happen. And if you get into them thinking that your portfolio can take advantage of their dynamic nature, thatโ€™s a point weโ€™ll address further down in this article.

Take March 2020. In this period, the biggest 1-month loss was 31.9%. Thatโ€™s as much as the average 31.2% loss that large-cap funds suffered, and close to the Nifty 50โ€™s 34% loss. In fact, 9 of the 21 funds in the category fell more than 20% in a month. The smallest loss was 11.6%.

Between March and May 2020, funds had more than 65% in unhedged equity exposure. So, you need to be very careful in what fund youโ€™re choosing because the category uniformly does not excel at keeping losses in check. And here again, remember that funds can change their nature, as explained above.

#3 Balanced advantage funds may limit upsides.

If a fund is not entirely invested in equity, this also means that participation in market rallies will also be capped. The balanced advantage category has a limited history; it came into being in 2018. Before this time, several hybrid funds did follow an equity-derivative-debt combination but werenโ€™t very defined in allocations or strategy. Because of the lack of relevant history, the long-term return potential for these funds is not clear.

But letโ€™s consider the current equity savings and balanced advantage categories. The earlier balanced funds that took derivative calls fell into one of these two categories. So looking at the long-term returns here can give some idea of their potential. The graph below shows the average 3-year return for large-cap funds (the least volatile among equity funds) and the balanced advantage plus equity savings categories. As you will see, while balanced advantage funds can contain downsides, the other side of the coin is that they may not deliver on upsides.

Asset allocation matters

After the sharp sell-off last March, stocksโ€™ rapid recovery naturally leads to hesitation now. Thatโ€™s fine. But the approach to booking profits and reducing your portfolioโ€™s risk does not equate to shifting to balanced advantage funds. The one factor that matters here is your asset allocation.

We had given a book profit call in August last year, and repeated the call in our equity outlook for this year. But we also explained how you should go about booking profits โ€“ which is to go back to your asset allocation. Where equity is high, prune exposure back to original/desired levels. Where mid-caps/small-caps have rallied, move back to original allocations. And do not stop SIPs.

Why are we insistent on asset allocation?

  • One, it reflects the extent of risk that you can (and should) take for your goal. It determines how much equity you can have based on the time you have to let equity to deliver and take into stride market falls, and how much debt should shore up your returns.
  • Two, it helps reduce portfolio volatility and contain downsides. This is exactly what youโ€™re looking for in overheated markets. It diversifies your return so youโ€™re not dependent on only one asset class delivering.
  • Three, it helps you know when to book profits. You pull out of equity to the extent that it has gone beyond what youโ€™re comfortable with, gets you to reduce risk, and lock in to profits.
  • And four, it significantly reduces the need to time markets. When you want to move to balanced advantage from equity, it means youโ€™re trying to time exit (and entry later). But markets donโ€™t have to move the way you think they should. All fundamentals pointed to excessive valuations last year, which was the reason we issued a book profit call. Markets continued to rally. If you tried to exit equity because markets are at a high, you may miss rallies and can also find it difficult to move back in.

This is why we say (in our book profit strategy) rebalance to original asset allocation to book profits and yet participate in equity.

You might counter that you donโ€™t want to shift out of equity, but want to add a balanced advantage fund to take the benefit of its dynamic allocation. Thatโ€™s fine, but by making small allocations, how much is the dynamic nature going to help your portfolio? Look at the portfolio below, which has a 65-35 equity-debt allocation.

Now, the worst 1-year return this portfolio delivered in the past 4 years is -20%. Now, letโ€™s say we added 5% in DSP Dynamic Asset Allocation (proportionately reducing the three index funds). This fund is adept at containing downsides, is among the more conservative, and uses a fundamental-technical blend of indicators to shift between equity, derivatives, and debt. But even with this dynamic shifting, the portfolioโ€™s overall loss wouldnโ€™t be too different at 19%. Only at an allocation of 15% would the impact be significant at a 16% loss.

To get to this allocation, you may have to either exit a good portion of your equity funds and reinvest in dynamic asset allocation or make significant fresh investments. And remember, you will never get the upside that equities deliver. In the example above, the equity exposure effectively comes down to about 58%. In a rally, especially like the one now, driven by liquidity and by sudden bounce back in the economy, the lower equity exposure can hurt.

What should you do?

Your portfolio should be a reflection of your risk level and timeframe. It is not just your behaviour in falling markets that shows your risk capacity โ€“ rising markets also are a test.

The simple solution is – donโ€™t give in to hype.

Hybrid aggressive funds were similarly loved and sought after during 2016 and 2017. They fell spectacularly from grace in 2018 by sliding below even large-cap funds and are yet to recover consistent performance.

Balanced advantage funds are not a magic wand to wave away all stock-market volatility. They have their specific uses. They are ideal for time frame of 2-3 years or so, where you cannot afford high equities. Or you may fancy this as a low-risk option in your equity portfolio. ย To know exactly how to fit balanced advantage funds in your portfolio, please read our detailed article on the same. In Prime Funds, the two Hybrid categories house the funds we recommend in this space.

Donโ€™t constantly change your portfolio based on your perception of equity or debt market movements. Accept that timing stock markets is hard to get right and that markets can rally much longer, or stay down much longer, than you bargained for. Asset allocation, category allocation, and fund allocation serve a purpose, which is to meet your risk/timeframe requirements and deliver across cycles.

Use simple rules like:


Relevant Article : How to build a Stock Portfolio?

 

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39 thoughts on “Should you invest in balanced advantage funds now?”

  1. Thanks for another great article.
    Wanted to ask if the tax treatment of BA funds and DAA funds changes according to the equity component from time to time or are they always treated as equity for tax purposes regardless of their composition ?

    1. Hello sir,

      Theoretically, you’re right in that if a fund’s asset allocation keeps changing, it may not always meet the criteria to qualify for equity tax. In reality though, these funds aim at steadily keeping unhedged equity + derivative at 65% or higher so that they are taxed like equity.

      Thanks,
      Bhavana

  2. Very good article – dsp dynamic seems to be the only true to nature DA fund based on the data provided.
    Do you think parking funds in a conservative Money market fund is a better option than liquid funds for a period of 2-3 years?

    1. Hello sir,

      It’s hard to pinpoint what true to nature in these funds mean. Theoretically, what they have to do is to increase hedging when markets are high and go more into equity when markets are low. They all do this – but because valuations, highs and lows etc can be interpreted differently, and because each have their own metrics to gauge, they will differ. Some are more conservative, some are less. So in choosing funds, if you want to, you need to know what the fund does.

      For 2-3 years, money market funds are a better option than liquid funds.

      Thanks,
      Bhavana

      1. Understood, Know thyself is simple but hard to achieve mantra !!! I have a conservative outlook while investing and this is what I meant by true to nature.
        Excellent article. Please keep them coming

  3. Thank you for the informative article.

    I am invested in Kotak BAF. They do a daily rebalance, based on P/E, P/B and a few other magic ingredients. Can you comment on this fund?

    PS: I invested right into Mar/Apr2020 and seeing good returns with low vol.

    1. Hello sir,

      We haven’t done any detailed analysis on the fund so wouldn’t be able to fully comment. The fund’s asset allocation certainly changes on a daily basis, and unhedged equity can go up at times when markets are down. In terms of returns, it beats the category average. But it is higher-volatile than category and is not the best at downside containment, either. If you hold it, you can continue doing so.

      Thanks,
      Bhavana

  4. Murali Krishnamurthy

    Nice article. Most ppl even after investing for several years in markets, are finding it tough to ignore impulses.

    1. Thanks, sir! It all stems from the need to maximise returns and protect losses ๐Ÿ™‚

      Regards,
      Bhavana

  5. Sivasubramanian Viswanathan

    Fantastic one. So clear analysis and reco. I did wonder these fluctuations how dynamically or near real time AMC can shift their bet for a investor. Its up to me to be a fund manager to own my allocations.

    1. Hello sir,

      Thanks! These funds can help in specific situations, to provide better returns or lower portfolio volatility. As you rightly said, it is not to dynamically change your own asset allocation.

      Regards,
      Bhavana

  6. Well timed article Bhavana !

    Would you suggest any of the โ€œtrueโ€ BAFs as an option for a retiral portfolio that looks to draw, say about 6-7% per annum after a 3-4 year cool off ?

    Thanks,
    Ramesh

    1. Hello sir,

      Well, what is a true BAF? ๐Ÿ™‚ Each fund has its own model of allocations. You can use them in retirement portfolios IF you’ve got other debt funds/fixed income options to supply your income stream, you’re willing to take the risk of these funds delivering low returns in falling markets, and you do not make such funds a big part (more than 15%) of your portfolio.

      Thanks,
      Bhavana

      1. There are still funds like HDFC BAF which seem to continue with its older style while others such as Kotak BAF have started imbibing the IPru style. Hence the โ€œtrueโ€ part !

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