CRR_Call Tracker

Text/HTML

Text/HTML

ValueProductView

ValueProductPastPerformance

Company NameReco DateReco PriceExit PriceExit Date% ReturnIn days
ITC Ltd. 28/12/2023464.20487.5002/01/2025 5.02% 1 yrs
Britannia Industries Ltd. 27/07/20234,875.805,028.2512/11/2024 3.13% 1 yrs
JSW Steel Ltd. 22/02/2024826.951,003.0026/09/2024 21.29% 217 days
Bajaj Auto Ltd. 22/08/20249,910.0011,930.0017/09/2024 20.38% 26 days
Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd. 26/10/20235,429.306,536.0005/07/2024 20.38% 253 days
Shriram Finance Ltd. 25/04/20242,430.102,955.0028/06/2024 21.60% 64 days
Coal India Ltd. 25/01/2024389.50501.6022/05/2024 28.78% 118 days
Infosys Ltd. 27/10/20221,522.601,411.6019/04/2024 -7.29% 1 yrs
State Bank Of India 25/05/2023581.30782.0505/03/2024 34.53% 285 days
The Indian Hotels Company Ltd. 24/08/2023401.85517.9007/02/2024 28.88% 167 days

CRR_MVC_PastPerformance

Text/HTML

Our Other Trader Products

EasyDNNNews

Are large cap funds losing shine?
Shashikant Singh
/ Categories: Mutual Fund

Are large cap funds losing shine?

The success of mutual fund schemes have now become more of a relative performance. Every investor's eyes seem focused on a comparison that has become as much a part of our lives as the daily fluctuations in the stock market. When there was a bull market, most fund investors hardly felt much about the relative performance. It seems that only after the recent downfall, they recognize not what was, but what might have been.

This is especially true for the large-cap dedicated funds that seems to have underperforming its benchmark in recent periods. The average returns given by the funds has been lower than the frontline indices for all the period less than or equal to three years. For 5-year and 10-year period they have outperformed the benchmark.

 

Even in terms of percentage of funds that have outperformed their benchmark is very low in recent period, however, increases with period. For example in the last one month only 14 per cent of the funds were able to beat their benchmark, however, for the 10-year period it increases to 71 per cent.

One of the reasons for such underperformance may be due to the recent fall in the market and certain regulatory changes that have been introduced a couple of years back. According to these changes, large-cap funds need to have minimum 80 per cent of their corpus invested in large-cap stocks. Earlier there was no standard definition for market capitalisation and their holdings in a fund. Therefore, many a times large-cap dedicated funds used to hold substantial portion of their corpus in mid-cap and small-cap stocks that would help them to outperform the large-cap indices that were their benchmarks.

Hence, if you want to invest in large-cap funds, you can invest through large-cap index funds or ETFs.

Previous Article Five stocks with selling interest
Next Article HFCL jumps on bagging order of Rs. 2,467 crore from BSNL
Print
929 Rate this article:
5.0
Please login or register to post comments.

DALAL STREET INVESTMENT JOURNAL - DEMOCRATIZING WEALTH CREATION

Principal Officer: Mr. Shashikant Singh,
Email: principalofficer@dsij.in
Tel: (+91)-20-66663800

Compliance Officer: Mr. Rajesh Padode
Email: complianceofficer@dsij.in
Tel: (+91)-20-66663800

Grievance Officer: Mr. Rajesh Padode
Email: service@dsij.in
Tel: (+91)-20-66663800

Corresponding SEBI regional/local office address- SEBI Bhavan BKC, Plot No.C4-A, 'G' Block, Bandra-Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai - 400051, Maharashtra.
Tel: +91-22-26449000 / 40459000 | Fax : +91-22-26449019-22 / 40459019-22 | E-mail : sebi@sebi.gov.in | Toll Free Investor Helpline: 1800 22 7575 | SEBI SCORES | SMARTODR