Comprehensive Guide for Investing in Equity Mutual Funds

Equity Mutual Funds

1. What are Equity Mutual Funds?

Equity Mutual Funds pool money from many investors and invest primarily in the shares of companies.

Their goal is to grow capital over time by participating in the stock market.

They suit investors looking for long-term growth and who can tolerate short-term volatility.

2. How Equity Mutual Funds Work

A fund manager (or a team) selects stocks and manages the portfolio according to the fund’s stated objective.

Investors own units of the fund; the fund’s Net Asset Value (NAV) rises or falls as portfolio stock prices change. Returns come from capital gains, dividends, or both

3. SEBI (2017) Classification

SEBI’s 2017 classification standardized mutual fund categories to improve comparability and reduce confusion. Key outcomes:

  • Clearer, well-defined categories (large‑cap, mid‑cap, small‑cap, multi‑cap, flexi‑cap, focused, sectoral/thematic, ELSS, dividend yield, value/contra).
  • Standard minimum asset allocation rules by market cap for many categories.
  • Reduced duplication — more meaningful comparisons for investors.

Note: This classification remains the backbone for categorizing equity schemes in India.

4. Types of Equity Mutual Funds (Post-SEBI)

CategorySimple Description
Large Cap FundAt least 80% in top 100 companies [ interms of market capitalisation ]
Relatively stable, lower volatility among equity funds.
Mid Cap FundAt least 65% in companies ranked 101–250.
Higher growth potential with moderate risk.
Small Cap FundAt least 65% in companies ranked 251+.
High growth potential, higher volatility.
Multi Cap FundMinimum 25% each in large, mid, small cap — balanced across market caps.
Flexi Cap FundMinimum 65% in equities; manager free to allocate across caps.
Flexible approach.
Focused FundMax 30 stocks — concentrated, high-conviction bets across caps.
Sectoral / Thematic FundMin 80% in a sector/theme (e.g., technology, pharma, ESG) — targeted and risky.
ELSSMin 80% in equities; 3-year lock-in; eligible for Section 80C tax benefit.
Dividend Yield FundMin 65% in dividend-paying companies — income-oriented equity exposure.
Value / Contra FundMin 65% following value or contrarian strategies — looks for undervalued stocks.

5. Active vs Passive Funds

Active funds aim to beat a benchmark by stock selection; passive funds replicate an index. Active funds charge higher fees and may outperform or underperform; passive funds are low-cost and deliver index returns.

FeatureActive FundsPassive Funds
ManagementActive stock selectionTracks an index (replication)
ObjectiveOutperform benchmarkMatch benchmark
CostHigher (research & management)Lower
ExamplesLarge/Mid/Small cap active fundsIndex funds, ETFs

6. How to Invest in Equity Mutual Funds

Investing choices are twofold: how you invest (SIP vs Lump Sum) and the channel (Direct, Regular, Online).

1) Based on Method

MethodWhat it meansSuitable for
SIP (Systematic Investment Plan)Regular fixed investments (e.g., monthly)Disciplined investors, beginners
Lump SumOne-time investmentInvestors with surplus funds or tactical view

2) Based on Channel

ChannelWhat it meansSuitable for
Direct Plan (AMC)Invest directly with the fund house — lower expense ratioDIY investors confident in selection
Regular Plan (Distributor/Advisor)Through advisor/distributor who may charge commissionInvestors seeking advice or hand-holding
Online Platforms / AppsEasy comparison and executionTech-savvy investors

7. How to Evaluate Fund Performance — Top 7 Parameters

The following parameters give a clear, practical view of fund quality and suitability.

ParameterWhat it tells you
Fund Returns (1/3/5-year)Historical growth — compare against peers and benchmark.
Benchmark ComparisonShows if fund beats or lags its stated benchmark.
Sharpe Ratio (Risk-adjusted return)Higher = better returns for risk taken.
AlphaManager’s value-add over benchmark (positive is good).
Standard DeviationVolatility measure — lower = steadier returns.
Expense RatioAnnual fees — lower expense helps net returns.
Consistency of PerformanceRegular outperformance across cycles — shows reliability.

Additions to check: Fund manager tenure, AUM size, portfolio overlap, turnover ratio, exit load and style consistency.

8. Choosing Funds & Building an Equity Portfolio

Successful portfolio building hinges on time horizon and volatility tolerance. Below are sample templates you can adapt:

Investor TypeTime HorizonRisk ToleranceSample Fund Mix
Conservative Beginner5+ yearsLow–Moderate70% Large Cap +
30% Flexi/Multi Cap
Balanced Growth5–7 yearsModerate50% Large Cap + 30% Mid Cap +
20% Flexi Cap
Aggressive Long-Term7–10+ yearsHigh40% Large Cap + 40% Mid Cap + 20% Small Cap
Tax-Saver3+ years (lock-in)Moderate100% ELSS
Thematic / Opportunistic5–8 yearsHighCore (Large/Mid) 70% + Thematic/Sectoral 30%

9. Core & Satellite Strategy

The Core & Satellite approach balances stability (core) with growth/opportunity (satellite).

Typical split (example): 70% Core / 30% Satellite — adjust toward core as you age or near goals.

Core: Low-cost, diversified funds — index funds, large-cap or flexi/multi-cap funds. Purpose: stability and steady returns.

Satellite: Mid/small-cap funds, sectoral/thematic, international funds or active alpha-seeking funds. Purpose: capture extra growth.

Rebalancing rule: Review annually (or when allocation drifts by ±5%) and move profits from satellite to core to restore original split.

Watchouts: avoid overtrading; ensure satellite remains a controlled, limited portion of the portfolio.

10. Fees, Costs & Their Impact

Costs reduce your net returns. Key fees:

  • Expense Ratio / TER: Annual management cost. Lower is better for long-term compounding.
  • Exit Load: Charges on early redemptions — affects short-term returns.
  • Transaction Costs & Taxes: Capital gains taxes apply on profits; frequent turnover increases tax drag.

Quick example: A 1% higher expense ratio over 10 years can significantly lower your corpus — always factor expense into fund comparisons.

11. Taxation of Equity Mutual Funds

Effective note: Tax rules below apply to transfers on or after 23 July 2024. Keep the article’s Last updated date in mind as tax rules can change.

Holding PeriodTax Rule (Equity Mutual Funds)Note
≤ 12 months (STCG)20% on gainsShort-term capital gains taxed at 20%

(applicable from 23 Jul 2024 for transfers on/after date).
> 12 months (LTCG)12.5% on gains above ₹1,25,000 per FYFirst ₹1,25,000 of gains in a financial year is exempt.
No indexation for equity funds.
Dividend / DistributionsTaxed in investor’s hands as per slabAMCs may deduct TDS on dividends above thresholds;

Dividend income is taxable as salary/other income per slab.
NRIsSame capital gains rates apply; TDS may be deductedNRIs should check treaty benefits and TDS mechanics with AMC / tax advisor.

Practical tip: Always calculate post-tax returns when comparing funds, especially for short-term exits.

12. FAQ’s

Are equity mutual funds risky?

Yes — they carry market risk. Over long horizons (5+ years), risk typically smooths out, increasing the chances of good returns.

How long should I stay invested?

Yes — SIPs often start at ₹500–₹1,000, making equity funds accessible.

How are gains taxed?

STCG (≤12 months) at 20%; LTCG (>12 months) at 12.5% on gains above ₹1,25,000 (applies to transfers on/after 23 Jul 2024).

Active or passive — which should I choose?

Passive funds (index/ETFs) are low-cost and predictable; active funds can outperform but cost more. Use a mix: passive core + active satellite is a pragmatic approach.

13. Glossary — Quick Terms to Know

  • NAV: Net Asset Value — price per unit of an MF.
  • SIP: Systematic Investment Plan — regular periodic investment.
  • AUM: Assets Under Management — fund size.
  • Expense Ratio: Annual charge by the fund.
  • XIRR / CAGR: Performance measures; XIRR for SIP returns.
  • Exit Load: Fee for early withdrawal

14. Practical Checklists & Downloads

Fund Selection Checklist :

  1. Does the fund objective match my goal?
  2. Benchmark & category clear?
  3. 1/3/5-year returns vs benchmark & peers.
  4. Sharpe / Alpha / Std Dev reviewed.
  5. Expense ratio reasonable.
  6. Fund manager tenure and AUM checked.
  7. Exit load & taxation understood.

Portfolio Checklist (Annual Check)

  • Review allocations and rebalance if drift >5%.
  • Check for style drift or major manager changes.
  • Move profits from satellite to core if needed.

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