They are passively managed where the fund manager’s intervention is not allowed. There are two popular indices in India: BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty. Index funds are those which primarily track these funds.
“There can be three kinds of index funds — index ETFs that are traded in the stock exchange, index mutual funds and those that map sectoral indices,”
If you don’t want to take the risk of how a fund manager performs, then index funds might be right for you, However, it is better to seek help from a financial planner before investing if you’re unable to understand it. The total expense ratio (TER) for index funds is 1%, according to Securities and Exchange Board of India. “One who wants to invest in the broader market and wants more diversification and lower costs can look at index funds,”
It is one of the hottest topics debated these days: is it time for mutual fund investors to switch to passively-managed index funds from their actively-managed funds.
Recent re-categorization of mutual funds schemes by Sebi has contributed to increasing the popularity of index funds in India, which have always been popular in the developed countries.
As you must be aware that index funds are very low on cost and do not involve active fund management. They are also immune to any human biases. Index funds simply replicate the underlying Index. You can even buy the ETFs (exchange-traded funds) directly. The expenses in ETFs are lower than index schemes. You must have a Demat account to buy an ETF.
Though the gradual shift has started taking place towards index funds, only time will tell how fast they will gain popularity.
I think it is way too early to think that way because an active fund manager will strive to generate better returns than passive index funds. An active fund manager will always focus on generating the alpha, especially, given the fact that our market is still developing. Often, an investor makes a mistake of comparing Indian market to a developed market like the US and believe me that is not an apple-to-apple comparison. The stock market in the US and other developed countries are matured and investing a big pie of your portfolio towards index funds there makes more sense. But the Indian stock market is yet to achieve that kind of maturity and to top it all our market capitalization is way behind than what it is in the developed market which gives an added advantage to an active fund manager for creating better returns than an index fund.
Then there other important reasons like the flexibility, what an active mutual fund manager has in picking up the qualitative stocks in order to outperform the passive index funds. So, as long as the fund manager is good in generating the alpha, the fund will keep beating the index fund which only copies the benchmark indices, thereby making you lose the possibility of making higher returns.
Historically, mid-cap and multi-cap funds have always outperformed the index funds but in the recent past these categories have resulted in negative returns and even the large-cap funds have given lesser returns than an index fund. In fact, large-cap funds will find it more challenging to outperform the index fund in the coming days because of re-categorization: the fund manager of a large-cap fund is mandated to buy most of the stocks from the top 100 companies.
They have to follow true-to-label philosophy and stick to the mandate of the large-cap category. This mandate offers them very little chance to constantly beat the index. Prior to re-categorization, fund managers had the freedom to buy stocks outside the universe of the top 100 companies.
There is another interesting reason why an active fund manager could not beat the returns of an index fund. In fact, more than 80 percent returns of Nifty stocks came from very handful stocks like Reliance Industries, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, TCS, ICICI Bank, and Infosys. This is the answer to the question most investors kept asking: why did my fund fail to generate returns when the market was soaring to new highs.
Well, looking at the market and the way it will shape in the future, a lot of money will flow into the top 100 companies via the index funds, and the awareness will also increase. I believe you should gradually shift 20-25 percent of your portfolio towards index funds. And don’t go only for index funds based on major indices like the Sensex or Nifty. Add the next nifty 50 index or the second-best 50 companies in the Indian stock market.
In short, you should create a good mix of index funds that match your risk profile. However, you should not ignore the value of an active fund and the power of mid-caps and small caps, so focus on investing in the right mix of index funds (replace large-cap funds with pure index funds). If your risk profile is aggressive, go for some small caps also via SIPs which always works and provides you the cost averaging and thereby consistent returns in the long run. There are a lot of good mid-cap and multi-cap schemes which haven’t performed in the past few years, thereby, making it a good time to enter into those schemes via STP or SIP mode.
Bhaven, CFP is a founder of the personal financial planning firm
To consult him for your personal financial planning click on the below link.