The current market condition offers a good investment universe for ‘go
anywhere' multi-cap funds such as Reliance Equity Opportunities.
Investors with some risk appetite can consider phased exposure in the fund through systematic investment plans.
Investors who opted for three-year SIPs during the peak of 2008 and
continued to stay invested in the fund will have earned an absolute
return of 33 per cent against minus 1 per cent clocked by lump sum
investors. The SIP return vis-à-vis the lumpsum performance is an
indicator that the fund is subject to high volatility.
Despite a decline of 18 per cent in its NAV over a one-year period, the
fund's asset under management grew by 12 per cent, implying that the
fund has witnessed higher inflows. Markets such as the present one may
provide ample opportunities for fund manager to deploy such funds in
stocks at attractive valuations.
SUITABILITY
Although Reliance Equity Opportunities is benchmarked against the BSE
100, it takes substantial exposure to mid and small-cap stocks.
The fund is suitable for investors who can assume risks that come with
the above market-cap segment. An active profit-booking strategy will
help cash in on extraordinary rallies.
PERFORMANCE
The fund's high SIP returns indicate that its NAV is subject to massive
swings. For instance, between January 2008 and March 2009, the fund's
NAV swung between Rs 31 and Rs 11.8.
But that also means higher opportunities to average rupee costs and make
superior returns during a market pullback. The fund proved its mettle
in the 2008-09 pullback and amply rewarded it investors.
The fund, over three- and five-year periods, clocked compounded
annualised returns of 30 per cent and 7.6 per cent, respectively,
against 16.2 per cent and 3.1 per cent returns by its benchmark BSE 100.
Its performance over a three-year period placed it at the top of
multi-cap peers. Higher exposure to interest-rate sensitive sectors such
as banks and auto, however, resulted in a sharp correction in the last
six months.
The fund's top ten stocks accounted for 40 per cent of its assets. Its
preferred sectors such as software, pharma, banks, auto and auto
ancillaries accounted for 53 per cent of the portfolio.
The fund appeared to be contrarian in its outlook on FMCG. It has held
less than a per cent of its assets in the FMCG sector for more than a
year now.
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