As per SEBI guidelines on Categorization and Rationalization of schemes issued in October 2017, mutual fund schemes are classified as –
The objective of an equity fund is generally to seek long-term capital appreciation. Equity funds may focus on certain sectors of the market or may have a specific investment style, such as investing in value or growth stocks.
Sectoral funds invest in a particular sector of the economy such as infrastructure, banking, technology or pharmaceuticals etc.
Examples of Sector Specific Funds - Equity Mutual Funds with an investment objective to invest in:
Thematic funds select stocks of companies in industries that belong to a particular theme - For example, Infrastructure, Service industries, PSUs or MNCs.
They are more diversified than Sectoral Funds and hence have lower risk than Sectoral funds.
Equity funds may be categorized based on the valuation parameters adopted in stock selection, such as
Equity funds may hold a concentrated portfolio to benefit from stock selection.
Contra funds are equity mutual funds that take a contrarian view on the market. Underperforming stocks and sectors are picked at low price points with a view that they will perform in the long run. The portfolios of contra funds have defensive and beaten-down stocks that have given negative returns during bear markets. These funds carry the risk of getting calls wrong as catching a trend before the herd is not possible in every market cycle and these funds typically underperform in a bull market. As per the SEBI guidelines on Scheme categorisation of mutual funds, a fund house can either offer a Contra Fund or a Value Fund, not both.
ELSS invests at least 80% in stocks in accordance with Equity Linked Saving Scheme, 2005, notified by Ministry of Finance.
A debt fund (also known as income fund) is a fund that invests primarily in bonds or other debt securities. Debt funds invest in short and long-term securities issued by the government, public financial institutions, companies.
Floating rate funds, Dynamic Bond funds, Fixed Maturity Plans. Debt funds have potential for income generation and capital preservation.
The primary focus of short-term debt funds is coupon income. Short term debt funds have to also be evaluated for the credit risk they may take to earn higher coupon income. The tenor of the securities will define the return and risk of the fund.
Short-Term Fund combine coupon income earned from a pre-dominantly short-term debt portfolio with some exposure to longer term securities to benefit from appreciation in price.
Capital Protection Oriented Funds are close-ended hybrid funds that create a portfolio of debt instruments and equity derivatives.
“Arbitrage” is the simultaneous purchase and sale of an asset to take advantage of the price differential in the two markets and profit from price difference of the asset on different markets or in different forms.
Hence, Arbitrage funds are considered to be a good choice for cautious investors who want to benefit from a volatile market without taking on too much risk.
Index funds create a portfolio that mirrors a market index.
Investors have the comfort of knowing the stocks that will form part of the portfolio, since the composition of the index is known.
An ETF is a marketable security that tracks an index, a commodity, bonds, or a basket of assets like an index fund.
Gold ETFs are ETFs with gold as the underlying asset.
The price of ETF units moves in line with the price of gold on the metal exchange. After the NFO, units are issued to intermediaries called authorized participants against gold or funds submitted. They can also redeem the units for the underlying gold.
International funds enable investments in markets outside India, by holding in their portfolio one or more of the following:
International equity funds may also hold some of their portfolios in Indian equity or debt.
For the purpose of taxation, these funds are considered as non-equity oriented mutual fund schemes.