HomeNewsBusinessShort Call: Fund managers flash amber signal for small caps; Titan, MCX, Bajaj Auto in focus

Short Call: Fund managers flash amber signal for small caps; Titan, MCX, Bajaj Auto in focus

This is a phase of the market when every story appears promising, and the market is ignoring potential risks.

July 07, 2023 / 08:14 IST
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Fund managers are right in being cautious, history has shown that corrections in small and midcap stocks are quite painful.

People who treat stocks like lottery tickets generally have similar odds of winning 

― Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr

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If you are wondering how much longer the rally in small and micro cap stocks can go on for, look at cues from fund managers managing small cap and other similar kind of funds. Nippon India Mutual Fund on Thursday said it was restricting lumpsum investments into its small cap fund. Over the last couple of weeks, Tata Small Cap Fund and HDFC Defence Fund too announced similar curbs. These developments highlight two things: a) the craze for small cap funds among retail investors and b) the difficulty fund managers are finding credible investment ideas.

This is a phase of the market when every story appears promising, and the market is ignoring potential risks that could arise from multiple factors—disruption, more competition, sudden fall in demand, change in regulations. Fund managers are right in being cautious, history has shown that corrections in small and midcap stocks are quite painful. Lumpsum investments typically come from investors chasing momentum. When the market corrects, as it will at some point, these investors will be the first to ask for their money back. And that poses a problem for fund managers. By their very definition, small caps are not very liquid, meaning the stocks are not easy to buy and sell in large quantities. When faced with huge redemptions, fund managers will have to sell the best stocks in their portfolio because only those will take finders in a falling market. So it is a double whammy where you sell your good stocks, and are left with the not-so-good ones. This could affect the performance of the portfolio, causing the remaining investors in the fund to have second thoughts, and more redemptions could follow. This trend has been seen in 2001, 2008 and more recently 2018.