HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceSmart beta funds: Low-cost investments, but yet to develop a track record

Smart beta funds: Low-cost investments, but yet to develop a track record

Only if your portfolio is already well diversified, can you consider having one such fund in your portfolio

June 25, 2020 / 10:27 IST
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How can you earn more than market returns and still avoid going into unchartered territories such as investing in unheard of small-sized companies? Smart beta funds may help you outperform. Though these funds are expected to act as a bridge between passive and active strategies, their limited track record in the Indian market is not convincing. If at all, you may enter only with a long-term view to benefit from these funds.

Select strategies do well

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Over the last three years, smart beta funds tracking the Nifty 50 Value 20 index did well. This index consists of 20 companies selected on the basis of their return on capital employed (ROCE), price-earnings (PE), price to book value (PB) and dividend yield (DY). For example, Kotak NV 20 ETF and ICICI Prudential NV20 ETF delivered 7.25 per cent and 7.13 per cent over the three-year period, respectively. The Nifty50 TRI over past three years gave 3.61 per cent returns. Large-cap equity funds delivered 2.37 per cent. “The portfolio is concentrated with the top 20 value stocks from the Nifty 50 universe.  Portfolio's overweight position in information technology and consumer goods has helped to generate positive returns,” says Chintan Haria, Head Product Development & Strategy, ICICI Prudential AMC.

But not all smart beta funds outperformed the Nifty 50 Index. DSP Equal Nifty 50 lost 15.75 per cent over the last one year compared to the 11.03 per cent loss of the Nifty 50 TRI index. Large-cap funds as a category lost 10.03 per cent on an average over same period. “We have seen a few large-cap stocks doing extremely. In an equal weight strategy, we hold all stocks with equal allocation,” explains Anil Ghelani, Head of passive investments and products, DSP Investment Managers. In a rally led by a few stocks, this strategy tends to underperform, but in a broad-based rally in equity markets, this strategy should outperform, like we have been seeing in the past few months. Instead of betting on a few stocks, investors should opt for exposure across stocks and sectors in the long term, he adds.