Comparative Analysis of Risk Return and
Comparative Analysis of Risk Return and
Comparative Analysis of Risk Return and
ISSN: 2068 - 3537, E – ISSN (online) 2069 – 9476, ISSN – L = 2068 – 3537
Year XXI, No. 1, 2015, pp. 69-83
Abstract
Mutual Funds have become a widely popular and
effective way for investors to participate in financial
markets in an easy, low-cost fashion, while muting risk
characteristics by spreading the investment across
different types of securities, also known as
diversification. It can play a central role in an
individual's investment strategy. With the plethora of
schemes available in the Indian markets, an investors
needs to evaluate and consider various factors before
making an investment decision. The present investigation
is aimed to examine the performance of safest investment
instrument in the security market in the eyes of investors.
Five mutual fund large cap scheme have been selected
for this purpose.
The examination is achieved by assessing various
financial tests like Sharpe Ratio, Standard Deviation,
Alpha, and Beta. Furthermore, in-depth analysis also has
been done by considering return over the period of last
five years on various basis, expenses ratio, corpus-size
etc. The data has been taken from various websites of
mutual fund schemes and from www.valueresearch.com.
The study will be helpful for the researchers and financial
analysts to analyze various securities or funds while
Comparative analysis of risk, return and diversification of mutual fund
Introduction
Mutual Funds over the years have gained immensely in their
popularity. Apart from the many advantages that investing in mutual
funds provide like diversification, professional management, the ease of
investment process has proved to be a major enabling factor. However,
with the introduction of innovative products, the world of mutual funds
nowadays has a lot to offer to its investors. The industry broadly caters to
all types of investors depending on their risk return preferences. A mutual
fund is the ideal investment vehicle for today's complex and modern
financial scenario. Mutual funds offer several advantages over investing
in individual stocks, including diversification and professional
management. A mutual fund may hold investments in dozens of stocks,
thus reducing the risk associated with owning any particular stock. A
Mutual Fund is a pure intermediary that performs a basic function of
buying and selling securities on behalf of its unit holders. Mutual Fund is
a body corporate which pools up the money from different types of
investors and invests those funds on behalf of the investors in diversified
securities. In other words, a mutual fund allows an investor to take a
position indirectly in a basket of assets. A majority of investors are quite
content in simply analysing the appreciation in the net asset value (NAV)
of their investment. They are not much more concerned about the risk
associated with the investment alternative. Risk measure mostly deal with
the character of a fund’s returns and the manner in which these returns
have been achieved.
Equity funds
Equity funds have the objective to provide capital appreciation
over a long term. A major portion of their investments is in equities
which provide potentially superior returns than other avenues of
investment. Equity schemes offer potentially the best possible returns
among all mutual fund schemes, but carry the highest risk as well. The
equity funds are high on the risk scale as the share prices are volatile.
These funds try to reduce the risk by diversifying the investments in
R. Ahmad, A. Nomani
Literature review
Harry Markowitz (1952) provides a theory about how investors
should select securities for their investment portfolio given beliefs about
future performance. He claims that rational investors consider higher
expected return as good and high variability of those returns as bad. From
this simple construct, he says that the decision rule should be to diversify
among all securities, securities which give the maximum expected
returns. His rule recommends that the portfolio with the highest return is
not the one with the lowest variance of returns and that there is a rate at
which an investor can increase return by increasing variance. This is the
cornerstone of portfolio theory as we know it.
William Sharpe (1964) and John Lintner (1965) separately extend
the work of Markowitz. They show that the theory implies that the rates
of return from efficient combinations of risky assets move together
perfectly (will be perfectly correlated). This could result from their
common dependence on general economic activity. If this is so,
diversification among risky assets enables investors to escape from all
risks, except the risk resulting from changes in economic activity.
Therefore, only the responsiveness of an asset return to changes in
economic activity is relevant in assessing its risk. Investors only need to
be concerned with systematic risk [beta], not the total risk proposed by
Markowitz
Veit and Cheney (1982) investigated the ability of mutual funds
managers to adjust the risk level of funds to leverage the ability to time
the market. They test the null hypothesis that alphas and betas are the
same in bull and bear market using annual data for 74 funds over the
1944-78 periods. The sample was sub-divided into balanced funds,
income and growth to examine differential effects by investment
objective.
The Financial Express Investment Magazine (1997) conducted a
study jointly with Value Research, a pioneer in tracking mutual funds in
Comparative analysis of risk, return and diversification of mutual fund
India, which shows that the bond funds have emerged as winners, while
equity funds plunged deeper into red.
The Intelligent Investor (2000), a leading business magazine
conducted a Comprehensive survey of mutual fund performance 1999 to
help the investors to choose the funds that best suits their needs. The
survey is based on data source from credence, the Mumbai - based
monitor of mutual fund performance, with a cut off date for the survey of
December 31, 1999. The methodology and the performance parameters
they used are; the three months return and one-year return calculated by
taking the percentage change in net asset values, adjusted for rights,
bonuses and dividends, if any in the interim; the three-year and five-year
returns are likewise adjusted and annualized.
Blake David and Timmermann Allan (2003) in their assessment
“Performance Persistence in Mutual Funds: An Independent Assessment
of the Studies prepared by Charles River Associates for the Investment
Management Association” believed that there is a reasonable case for
arguing that risk-adjusted past performance data should be included in the
FSA’s Comparative Tables. They argued that this is not because of the
traditional argument over whether superior performance might or might
not persist, which we regard as inconclusive, but rather because of the
evidence that inferior performance seems to persist. They considered that
it is important for investors to have easy access to reliable information on
underperforming funds so they can modify their investment strategies
accordingly.
Shanmugham (2000) conducted a survey of 201 individual
investors to study the information sourcing by investors, their perceptions
of various investment strategy dimensions and the factors motivating
share investment decisions, and reports that among the various factors -
psychological and sociological - dominated the economic factors in share
investment decisions.
III. To find out the best Mutual Fund scheme in terms of return over
the selected period of study.
IV. To suggest the means to improve return by investment in
mutual funds.
V. To compare the risk associated with the mutual fund schemes.
Research methodology
The present investigation is aimed to examine the performance of
the safest investment instrument in the security market in the eyes of
investors i.e., mutual funds by specially focusing on equity schemes. Five
mutual fund schemes have been selected for this purpose. The
examination is achieved by assessing various financial tests. To carry out
the research, the following methodology is adopted:
Data collection
The present research is a study of examining and analysing
selected mutual fund schemes by using different financial and statistical
tools. The Large cap schemes taken for this purpose are:
HDFC Top 200 Fund (G)
DSP-BR Top 100 Equity - RP (G)
ICICI Pru Top 100 Fund -Inst –I
Franklin India Bluechip (G)
Birla SL Frontline Equity -A (G)
This study compares five funds launched by public/private sector,
and foreign mutual fund players in India. The schemes have been selected
using deliberate sampling method subject to the criteria mentioned:
A. All the funds are taken as per the ranking done by CRICL
B. Considering corpus size of AMC 25 crore to 1000 crore
C. The funds that have been consider as the minimum investment
500 and maximum 100000 Rs
D. The performances of funds are calculated on the bases of their
risk and return
E. Closing Net Asset Values (NAV) of the selected funds are taken
on monthly basis.
The study is exclusively based on secondary data, which has been
collected from various websites, journals and fact sheets of various
mutual fund schemes published by them time to time.
Comparative analysis of risk, return and diversification of mutual fund
free investment is zero. The higher the Beta value, the higher the degree
of Correlation with the market index and the fund will be.
(V) R-Squared
R-Squared measures the co-relation between returns generated by
a fund and its benchmark index. This is indispensable in ascertaining the
reliability of the beta of a fund. It is a statistical measure that represents
the percentage of a fund or security's movements that can be explained by
movements in a benchmark index. R-squared values range from 0 to 100.
An R-squared of 100 means, that all the movements of a fund are
completely explained by movements in the index. A high R-squared
(between 85 and 100) indicates the fund's performance patterns have been
in line with the index. A fund with a low R-squared (70 or less) doesn't
act much like the index.
Comparative analysis of risk, return and diversification of mutual fund
Franklin
DSP ICICI
HDFC Templeton Birla Sun
BlackRock Prudential
Asset Asset Life Asset
AMC/Fund Investment Asset
Mgmt.. Mgmt. Mgmt. Co.
Managers Mgmt.Co.
Co. Ltd. (India) Ltd.
Limited Ltd
Pvt. Ltd.
Latest
201.863 98.444 19.99 212.827 84.53
NAV
3 Months 1.30% 0.20% 2.70% 0.60% 2.30%
6 Months 14.60% 12.10% 15.60% 12.00% 13.60%
1 Year -5.20% -3.20% 3.60% -2.00% -4.50%
2 Years 2.40% 2.70% 7.60% 4.60% 1.60%
3 Years 12.70% 11.40% 14.70% 13.00% 11.80%
5 Years 10.60% 8.30% 8.20% 8.10% 8.00%
20
19.5
19
18.5
18
17.5
17
16.5
16
15.5
15
14.5
HDFC Top DSPBR Top ICICI Franklin Birla Sun
200 100 Equity Prudential India Life
Reg Top 100 Bluechip Frontline
Inst I Equity
that out of the selected schemes the most risky fund is of HDFC Top
200. As the standard deviation is an unsystematic risk which is not
going to minimize through diversification. It is beyond the control of
investors.
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
HDFC Top DSPBRTop ICIC Franklin Birla Sun
200 100 Prudential India Life
Top 100 Bluechip Frontline
Inst I Equity
0.95
0.9
0.85
0.8
0.75
0.7
HDFC Top DSPBR ICICI Franklin Birla Sun
200 Top 100 Prudential India Life
Equity Top 100 Bluechip Frontline
Reg Inst I Equity
Franklin
DSP-BR Top ICICI Pru Birla SL
HDFC Top India
Scheme 100 Equity - Top 100 Frontline
200 Fund (G) Bluechip
RP (G) Fund -Inst –I Equity -A (G)
(G)
TCS, Infosys, Infosys,
SBI, Infosys, ICICI Bank,
Reliance, Reliance, ICICI Bank,
Top 5 ITC, ICICI ITC, Infosys,
Wipro, Kotak Bharti Airtel, Bharti Airtel,
holdings Bank, Tata Reliance,
Mahindra, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank,
Motors (D) Larsen
BPCL Sun Pharma Reliance
Weight
age to
30.43% 29.30% 42.74% 30.93% 23.07%
top 5
holdings
Banking/Fina Banking/Fina Banking/Fin
Technology, Banking/Financ
Top 3 nce, nce, ance, Oil &
Pharmaceutic e, Technology,
Sectors Technology, Technology, Gas,
als, Oil & Gas Automotive
Oil & Gas Oil & Gas Technology
Weight
age to
44.96% 46.72% 48.83% 42.67% 43.88%
Top 3
Sectors
Conclusions
Observation of the results found on the basis of several
calculations indicates that out of the five selected Large cap mutual fund
schemes, in short-run ICICI Pru Top 100 Fund -Inst –I manages to be at
number one in terms of returns over the period of last one month and six
months as well as in long run at number one position in terms of the
returns of last five years. As far as the financial risk parameters are
concerned Franklin India Blue-chip was found least risky in terms of the
results of Beta (0.78) & Standard Deviation (16.39) and in terms of
returns ICICI Pru Top 100 Fund -Inst –I manage to earn the maximum
R. Ahmad, A. Nomani
returns per unit of risk, i.e., Sharpe ratio (0.48). Further research could
aim to extend the data set to include more equity diversified mutual
funds, and also to enlarge the time scope to investigate whether the
market has changed (improved) over time.
Suggestions
The main objective of the investment is to get return from
investment from the mutual funds. An investor should take following
the fund with the industry average and benchmark indices. The
Bibliography
Barua, S. K., Raghunathan, V., Verma, J. R. (1991). Master Share: A
Bonanza for large investors, Vikalpa, January –March.
Genesan, S. J. Raja. (2000). Mutual Funds, Indian Management, Vol.
39, No. 10, p. 42
Gupta, A. (2001). Mutual Funds in India, A study of Investment
Management, Finance India, Vol. 15, No. 2, p. 631.
Gupta, K. Shashi. (2006). Financial Institutions and markets, Kalyani
Publishers, New Delhi, p. 18.1-18.33
Jensen, M.C. (1968). The Performance of Mutual Funds 1945-64.
Journal of Finance, Vol.23, No.2, May, p. 389-314.
Comparative analysis of risk, return and diversification of mutual fund