Categories of Mutual Funds

  1. Diversified Equity Funds : These are those mutual funds which invests across all sectors and diversify their portfolio. They invest in large companies to small companies. Which results in wide diversification. It helps in spreading risk across all sector and return potential is very good.
  2. Tax saving Funds (ELSS) : These are special category of mutual funds which are tax saving funds called ELSS (Equity Linked Saving Schemes). These have a lock in period of 3 years. They are Diversified mutual funds in nature.
  3. Balanced Funds : These are the funds which put money in Equity and Debt in some balanced proportion. Balanced does not mean 50:50 , it may happen that they put money in ratio of 70:30 or 60:20 or may be 80:20 … but the ideal ratio would be 50:50. It depends on market conditions. In a very fast booming market, a fund with 7:30 mat be a balanced one. And in a bearish market a combination of 50:50 may be considered are an aggressive fund. These funds have low risk and low return capacity in comparison with normal equity funds.
  4. Sectoral Funds : These are Funds which invests all its money in companies of a particular sector or a bunch of sectors related to each others. The reason for this is high faith in the sector for growth and return potential because of which these funds are very risky and have high return potential. For eg: Reliance Diversified Power Fund .
  5. Mid Cap and Small Cap Funds : These funds are those funds which invest their money in Mid cap Stocks or small Cap stocks … Mid cap and Small Cap companies are companies categorised by there market capitalization.
    • Large Cap : greater than $10 billion
    • Mid Cap : Between $2 and $10 billion
    • Small Cap : Less then $2 billion

    Mid cap and Small Cap stocks are more riskier as they are small compared to large Cap stocks because of size and reachability in market. They also have huge potential for growth so they can give superb returns too. For eg:
    “Sanghvi Movers” gave a return of around 4500% in 5 years from 1992 – 1997. An investment of Rs 1 Lac was worth Rs 45 lacs in just 5 years.
    In the same period “Jindal Power and Steel” gave return of 20000% . So investment of Rs 50,000 was worth Rs 1 crore in just 5 years.

  6. Index funds : These are mutual funds which mirrors a particular mutual fund. They Put there money in the companies which are part of that index and in same proportion as per the weightage of the company in that index. For Eg:
    Franklin India Index Fund which tracks S&P CNX Nifty Fund will invest in companies in that fund in the same ratio as their weights. Suppose following is the weightage table for index:Reliance 10%
    Infosys 8%
    Wipro 8%
    …..
    …..
    Ranbaxy 3%

    Then the fund will also invest in these companies stocks in same proportion. The NAV’s of these mutual funds increase or decrease in the same way as the index. if index will grow by 2.4% then NAV will also increase by 2.4% .

  7. Exchange Traded Funds : ETFs are just like Index funds with some differences, ETFs are a mix of a stock and a MF in the sense that
    • Like ‘mutual funds’ they comprise a set of specified stocks e.g. an index lik Nifty/Sensex or a commodity e.g. gold; and like equity shares they are ‘traded’ on the stock exchange on real-time basis
    • ETFs are passively managed, have low distribution costs and minimal administrative charges. Hence most ETFs have lower expense ratios than conventional MFs.
    • Convenient to trade as it can be bought/sold on the stock exchange at any time of the day when the market is open (index funds can be bought only at NAV based on closing prices)
  8. Fund of Funds : These are mutual funds which invests in other mutual funds. They put money in different mutual funds in some proportion depending on their goals and objectives.
  9. Debt Funds : These are mutual funds which have their major holdings in secure and fixed income instruments like Fixed deposits , bonds . They also put a small proportion in Equity (High risk , high returns). These are secure in nature and provide low returns.
  10. Liquid Funds : Liquid funds are used primarily as an alternative to short-term fix deposits. They invest with minimal risk (like money market funds). Most funds have a lock-in period of a maximum of three days to protect against procedural (primarily banking) glitches, and offer redemption proceeds within 24 hours. Liquid funds score over short term fix deposits.
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