Building a Mutual Fund portfolio

The problem investors' face is choosing the right fund for their requirement

Investment Yogi Hyderabad
Last Updated : Jul 03 2013 | 9:16 AM IST
The mutual fund industry is on a roll. There are many funds coming every month in the market and claim to offer solution to investors’ appetite for returns. In the bull market, the number of funds swells. As many fund houses come up with new fund offers.
 
The problem investors’ face is choosing the right fund for their requirement. The problem is compounded when investors see that many funds have similar objective. For example, if an investor’s objective is to preserve capital and gain returns, there are hundreds of funds that claim to do precisely that.
 
Major Types of Mutual Fund

Mutual funds offer wide varieties. However, they can be divided into three major types:

Aggressive fund – These funds invest major part of their money in equities. Since equities are the riskiest investment of all, these funds entail high risk. The objective of such funds is to provide capital appreciation in the long run.
 
Balanced fund – These funds invest equal amount of money in equity and bonds. Since a significant part is investment in bond, the returns are low compared to aggressive fund. However, this also makes it less risky. The objective of these funds is to provide moderate returns by taking moderate risk.
   
Conservative funds – Conservative funds invest major part of the fund in bonds. Since bonds provide fixed return, these funds are considered safest of the three. The return is also low because of higher proportion of bond.
 
Let’s take the example of a fund house such as HDFC. In the long run, HDFC top 200 has beaten the HDFC balanced fund and HDFC Children's Gift Fund by a big margin. HDFC balanced fund also fared well compared to the HDFC Children's Gift Fund because of its investment in equity and bonds. The conservative fund HDFC Children's Gift Fund invested major part of its money in bonds and hence the return is lowest compared to the other two.
 
In the past few years, return of the equity fund HDFC top 200 varied from negative 4.67% to positive 31.57%. This is what makes equity funds risky. If you look at HDFC Children's Gift Fund, the fund has always given positive returns. This is what makes it safer.
 
Building portfolio

A portfolio is nothing but a set of investment assets to mitigate the risk. For example, if I buy just one stock or invest in just one sector, any change in the specific company or the sector will impact my returns heavily. If I invest in a number of stocks and in number of sectors, I will not be impacted much by adverse movement of a specific company’s business or a sector.
 
The only thing worse than buying a single stock or investing in one sector is diversifying into too many stocks and sectors.
So how many mutual funds an investor should have in his or her portfolio? Advisors generally agree that 3-4 mutual funds is all that you need in your portfolio.

Following are the three most important driving factors of the portfolio mix.
 
Your objective
Your portfolio should represent your objective. If you have short term goal, you should invest in funds that are conservative as these funds will ensure a decent return and no loss of capital. However, if you have long term goal, go for aggressive fund as aggressive funds do well in long term. Balanced funds are good for mid to long term.
 
Investment period
A younger person has longer investment horizon and hence can afford to invest a larger portion of his or her savings in aggressive fund. An older person will rather invest in conservative funds to preserve his capital. Typically a person of 30 years of age should invest 60%-70% of his money in equity oriented mutual funds while a person of 50 years of age should invest 60% - 70% in conservative funds. Rest can invest somewhere in between these numbers.
 
Risk appetite
The investment also depends on your risk appetite. Even if the investor is young, he or she may not invest major part of their savings in equity funds if the investor is risk averse.
   
Mutual funds are great way to build wealth for passive investors who either do not have time to study the businesses; neither have enough knowledge to take right decision. This is like outsourcing your work to a fund manager with a very little fee. Use this route to build wealth and happiness.
   


Source: InvestmentYogi is one of the leading personal finance websites in India
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First Published: Jul 03 2013 | 9:12 AM IST

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