Connect with us

Business

Mutual fund portfolio down Rs 1.5 lakh in 12 days. Is the decline due to regular plans or market volatility?

Published

on

Mutual fund portfolio down Rs 1.5 lakh in 12 days. Is the decline due to regular plans or market volatility?
Short-term declines in mutual fund portfolios often lead investors to question whether they are invested in the right schemes or plans. One common misconception is that losses in mutual funds are linked to the type of plan—regular or direct. However, financial experts say short-term portfolio movements are usually driven by market volatility, global developments, or geopolitical events rather than the structure of the plan itself. While direct plans may offer lower expense ratios compared to regular ones, switching between the two requires careful consideration of taxation, diversification, and long-term investment goals.

A similar situation was faced by Vijay, a 43-year-old IT professional from Haryana and a viewer of The Money Show on ET Now. His mutual fund portfolio, originally created by his father in 2013 and transferred to him in 2023, is currently valued at around Rs 31 lakh against a total investment of Rs 15.5 lakh.

The portfolio consists entirely of regular plans from a single fund house – SBI Mutual Fund and includes schemes such as SBI Equity Hybrid Fund, SBI Contra Fund, SBI ESG Fund, SBI Consumption Opportunities Fund, SBI Focused Fund, and SBI MNC Fund. Vijay had also been investing through SIPs earlier, but stopped contributions in October 2025.

Also Read | Domestic vs global investors: How silver ETF bets played out differently in 400% rally

Recently, he noticed that the value of his portfolio declined by around Rs 1.5 lakh in just 12 days. This led him to believe that being invested in regular plans could be the reason behind the loss, prompting him to consider redeeming the investments and moving to direct plans. He is also planning to restructure his portfolio and use the available long-term capital gains exemption of Rs 1.25 lakh before March 31.

Vijay also proposed a new portfolio allocation where 50% would be invested in flexi-cap funds such as Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund and HDFC Flexi Cap Fund, around 15% in midcap funds, including HDFC Midcap Fund and Edelweiss Midcap Fund, about 15% in global equities, and nearly 10% in gold.
In addition, he continues to invest Rs 90,000 per month through SIPs and aims to build a corpus of around Rs 1 crore within five years. He also wants to know whether his diversification plan is appropriate and which funds may be suitable for long-term retirement planning.

Existing portfolio analysis

According to Vishwajeet Parashar, a mutual fund expert, the first issue in Vijay’s portfolio is concentration risk. All the investments are currently with a single asset management company. While SBI Mutual Fund is the largest fund house in India, having all investments within one AMC may not be ideal. Diversifying across different fund houses can help reduce risk and improve portfolio balance.
However, Parashar advises Vijay not to redeem the entire portfolio at once. “He should diversify across AMCs for better diversification, and should not idly redeem the entire 30 lakhs in one chunk and he should withdraw slowly and gradually because otherwise, he would draw a good amount of capital gain tax,” Parashar said.

Advertisement

Since Vijay invested around Rs 15 lakh and the current value is close to Rs 30 lakh, the capital gains amount to roughly Rs 15 lakh. Redeeming the entire amount in one go could result in a capital gains tax of nearly Rs 1.8 lakh. Instead, he suggests withdrawing the money gradually across financial years. This staggered approach can help reduce the tax burden and avoid exiting the market at a single point.

He also recommends using the available long-term capital gains exemption of Rs 1.25 lakh before March 31 by redeeming units accordingly from selected funds.

Within the current portfolio, Parashar believes that two schemes—SBI Contra Fund and SBI Focused Fund—are strong performers and can be continued. The remaining funds may be gradually redeemed as Vijay restructures his portfolio and diversifies across fund houses.

“He can go slowly and instead of timing the market also in one shot, so it would be better if he can take out a few lakhs this financial year and maybe a few lakhs in the next financial year, so that would stagger the investment also. Having said this, two of his funds within the SBI category, SBI AMC, are good,” Parashar said

Advertisement

“So, he should continue with that like the SBI Contra Fund and SBI Focused Fund. The rest of the funds he can think of withdrawing. And yes, he is definitely right. He should enjoy this capital gain benefit of 1.25 lakh before March 31st, so he can withdraw from other funds and take this advantage,” the expert further said.

Also Read | Large, mid and small cap mutual funds see rising inflows in February. Is the shift back to equities underway?

Decline in portfolio – Regular plan or market volatility

Addressing Vijay’s concern about the recent decline in his portfolio, Parashar clarified that the loss is not linked to the fact that the funds are regular plans. The fall is largely due to market volatility and geopolitical tensions affecting equity markets currently. The difference between direct and regular plans lies primarily in the expense ratio, as direct plans have lower costs because they do not include distributor commissions.

However, investors should note that shifting from regular to direct plans is treated as a redemption followed by a fresh investment. Even if the switch is within the same fund house, it will still be considered a redemption for tax purposes. Therefore, investors should plan such transitions carefully while keeping tax implications in mind.

Advertisement

Proposed allocation

Looking at Vijay’s proposed allocation, Parashar believes the overall selection of funds is good but suggests avoiding duplication within categories. Instead of investing in two flexi-cap funds, he recommends choosing Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund, which also provides some exposure to global equities. Similarly, among the midcap options, he suggests continuing with HDFC Midcap Fund rather than holding two midcap schemes.

Along with these funds, Vijay can continue with the SBI Contra Fund and the SBI Focused Fund. This combination would provide diversification across fund houses and investment styles. Since Vijay is also planning to invest directly in gold and silver, he may not need additional multi-asset or multi-cap funds for diversification.

From a financial goal perspective, Vijay appears to be on track. With SIP contributions of Rs 90,000 per month and assuming an average return of around 12% annually, his SIP investments could grow to roughly Rs 73 lakh over the next five years. His current portfolio value of about Rs 29.5 lakh, after the recent decline, could potentially grow to around Rs 52 lakh over the same period. Together, this would take the total corpus to approximately Rs 1.25 crore, which is higher than his target of Rs 1 crore.

Also Read | Gold and silver ETFs slip up to 3% as rising crude prices dampen rate cut hopes. Is it time to buy or wait?

Advertisement

Retirement planning

For long-term retirement planning, Parashar suggests that Vijay may eventually consider hybrid-oriented funds that offer better downside protection. Funds such as ICICI Balanced Advantage Fund or ICICI Multi Asset Fund can help balance equity exposure and reduce volatility during market downturns.

He recommends that Vijay continue with his equity-oriented portfolio for now and gradually move a portion of the corpus toward hybrid or debt-oriented funds about a year before retirement to safeguard the accumulated gains.

Overall, the key takeaway for investors is that short-term declines in mutual fund portfolios are usually linked to market movements rather than the type of plan chosen. While shifting from regular to direct plans can reduce costs over time, not offset the loss incurred in the portfolio. So, such decisions should be made carefully with attention to taxation, diversification, and long-term investment goals.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

Advertisement

If you have any mutual fund queries, message on ET Mutual Funds on Facebook/Twitter. We will get it answered by our panel of experts. Do share your questions on ETMFqueries@timesinternet.in alongwith your age, risk profile, and Twitter handle.

Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

Market Brief: The AI Agent Wars – What Investors Need To Know

Published

on

Market Brief: The AI Agent Wars - What Investors Need To Know

Swarm of Autonomous Military Drones Connected by Digital Network

onurdongel/iStock via Getty Images

Jensen Huang called OpenClaw “probably the most important software release ever.” Eight weeks later, the open-source lobster has 163K GitHub stars, its creator has been hired by OpenAI, and every major AI lab is scrambling to ship its own agent

Continue Reading

Business

Mutual funds reduce investments in IT stocks in February, weight slips to 8 year low

Published

on

Mutual funds reduce investments in IT stocks in February, weight slips to 8 year low
Mutual funds have reduced their investments in the IT stocks, and the weight slipped to an eight-year low level, according to a report by Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

The investments on a monthly basis have gone down by 140 basis points from 8.3% in January to 6.9% in February, whereas on a yearly basis, the investment has gone down by nearly 260 basis points from 9.5% in February 2025, the report further showed.

Technology weight slipped chartETMarkets.com

Also Read | Mutual fund portfolio down Rs 1.5 lakh in 12 days. Is the decline due to regular plans or market volatility?

The report further highlighted that in February, sectors such as Technology, Consumer, Telecom, E-Commerce, and Chemicals saw a MoM moderation in weights. The technology sector was the one to witness the maximum reduction in value as it saw a decline of 16.1% on a monthly basis.

The stocks that witnessed the maximum MoM decline in value were Infosys, TCS, HDFC Bank, Tech Mahindra, HCL Tech, Coforge, Persistent Systems, Bharti Airtel, Eternal, and Wipro.

Advertisement


Infosys saw a decline in value by 16.6%, and 11 funds added the stock, whereas nine sold out of their portfolio. TCS saw a decline in value by 13.9% and 11 funds added the stock to their portfolio, whereas nine sold out the same from their portfolio.
HCL Technologies saw a decline in value by 13.3%, and 12 funds added this stock to their portfolio, whereas eight sold out this stock in February. Wipro saw a decline in value by 7.2% and 11 funds added the stock in their portfolio, whereas nine sold out the same from their portfolio.BSE 200 had a total allocation of 7.5% in the technology sector against 6.9% by mutual funds. Some fund houses, such as Aditya Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund, Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund, ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, Motilal Oswal Mutual Fund, PPFAS Mutual Fund, Tata Mutual Fund, and UTI Mutual Fund, had more allocation compared to the BSE 200.

The report further highlighted that the technology sector remained among the top 10 sectoral allocations of most of the fund houses. In February, PPFAS Mutual Fund added 20.68 lakh shares of TCS.

According to the monthly portfolio, significantly increasing stakes in HCL Technologies, Infosys, and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). PPFAS added 4.3 million shares of HCL Tech, 4.2 million shares of Infosys, and 1.9 million shares of TCS as the sector recorded a brutal 20% monthly crash, its steepest fall in nearly two decades

Also Read | Market volatility is a feature of equity markets, not a bug: Radhika Gupta urges new investors to stay calm

Foreign institutional investors sharply reduced their exposure to IT stocks in February, selling shares in two phases. They offloaded around Rs 11,000 crore worth of IT stocks in the first half of the month and another Rs 5,993 crore between February 15 and 28, according to data from NSDL.

Jefferies downgraded multiple stocks, including Infosys, HCL Tech and Mphasis to Hold, and TCS, LTIMindtree and Hexaware to Underperform, slashing price targets by up to 33%.

Advertisement

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

If you have any mutual fund queries, message on ET Mutual Funds on Facebook/Twitter. We will get it answered by our panel of experts. Do share your questions on ETMFqueries@timesinternet.in alongwith your age, risk profile, and Twitter handle.

Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source

Continue Reading

Business

Four killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine

Published

on

Four killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine


Four killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine

Continue Reading

Business

Rising concerns over India’s LPG supply: Causes, constraints & market implications

Published

on

Rising concerns over India’s LPG supply: Causes, constraints & market implications
Rising concerns over India’s Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) supply have resurfaced as geopolitical tensions intensify in West Asia and crude oil prices move higher. Although the country has not yet faced an acute shortage, oil marketing companies have begun prioritising household LPG supply, while restricting or carefully allocating cylinders to commercial users. The immediate cause of the renewed anxiety is the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints through which nearly 29% of global LPG shipments normally pass. Since early March, tanker movement through this corridor has dropped sharply after Iranian forces warned vessels against transit, causing freight rates to surge and severely slowing India’s LPG inflows from Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The disruption has resulted in an estimated 30% weekly decline in arrivals, and the problem is amplified by India’s limited storage capacity of barely 1.2 million tonnes, which covers only about 15 days of national demand, leaving the country heavily exposed to external shocks.

Where India’s LPG Comes From:

India imports most of its LPG and natural gas from the Middle East, particularly Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE. It is estimated that nearly 60–70% of India’s LPG imports transit through the Strait of Hormuz, making any prolonged disruption along this narrow passage highly consequential. Despite increased diversification—including periodic shipments from the United States—the Gulf remains India’s dominant supplier because of shorter transit times, lower costs and established long-term trade patterns.

Advertisement

Government’s Emergency Actions to Boost Domestic Supply:


In response to the emerging supply concerns, the Indian government has invoked emergency powers under the Essential Commodities Act, directing Indian refiners to maximise LPG production and ensure that all the gas is supplied solely to domestic LPG consumers and not used to produce petrochemicals. The government has also instructed that all LPG produced under this directive must be supplied solely to state-run oil marketing companies—IOCL, BPCL and HPCL—to ensure uninterrupted household distribution. At the same time, India has increased sourcing beyond the Gulf, with additional LPG cargoes arriving from the United States, although these shipments are not large enough to fully compensate for the loss of West Asian volumes.

How LPG Is Produced:

Advertisement

LPG is produced through two major pathways: natural gas processing and crude oil refining. In the first method, heavier hydrocarbons such as propane and butane are separated from raw natural gas and liquefied under pressure. In crude oil refining, propane and butane fractions emerge as part of the distillation process and are compressed into LPG. Because a significant portion of global LPG production is refinery-linked, LPG prices often move in tandem with crude oil market trends.

Potential Impact on Prices If Tensions Continue:


If disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz persist, LPG prices may face upward pressure due to surging freight costs, higher insurance premiums and tighter global availability. Although the government often cushions households through subsidies or price interventions, sustained constraints could ultimately raise market prices or increase fiscal burdens. Interestingly, crude oil prices have risen sharply due to geopolitical risks, while natural gas prices have remained relatively steady thanks to healthy inventories and diversified global supply chains—indicating that the current LPG challenge is primarily logistical rather than a fundamental supply shortage.

Steps India Must Take to Strengthen Future Resilience:


Looking ahead, India must strengthen its long-term resilience through a combination of infrastructure expansion, market diversification and consumption management. This includes increasing LPG storage capacity, developing strategic reserves, accelerating the construction of new pipelines and import terminals, expanding supplier diversification beyond the Gulf, encouraging adoption of piped natural gas (PNG) in urban areas, and regulating commercial LPG use during crisis periods. Ultimately, reducing import dependence, widening the supplier network and building adequate storage will play a decisive role in protecting households from prolonged disruptions.

(The author is Head of Commodity Research, Geojit Investments)

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Form 144 ConocoPhillips For: 14 March

Published

on


Form 144 ConocoPhillips For: 14 March

Continue Reading

Business

Meta reportedly weighs layoffs affecting 20% of workforce over AI costs

Published

on

Meta reportedly weighs layoffs affecting 20% of workforce over AI costs

Meta is reportedly weighing layoffs that could impact at least 20% of its workforce as the tech giant looks to offset rising artificial intelligence costs.

The cuts come as the technology company aims to offset the cost of artificial intelligence infrastructure and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Advertisement

The outlet added that the timing and size of the potential layoffs have not been finalized.

When reached for comment, a Meta spokesperson told FOX Business, “This is a speculative report about theoretical approaches.”

META CUTS OVER 1,000 JOBS IN MAJOR METAVERSE RETREAT

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen arriving in at a court in Los Angeles to stand trial over a social media lawsuit.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives at the Los Angeles Superior Court at United States Court House on Feb. 18, 2026, in Los Angeles, California. (Jill Connelly/Getty Images / Getty Images)

According to Reuters, top Meta executives recently shared plans for the proposed layoffs with other senior leaders at the company.

Advertisement

If the company were to slash 20% of its employees, the layoffs would amount to Meta’s largest restructuring since 2022 and early 2023, the outlet said.

Meta laid off 11,000 workers in November 2022 — around 13% of its workforce at the time, Reuters reported.

The company cut another 10,000 jobs months later.

JUDGE BLOCKS META FROM INTRODUCING ‘EXAGGERATED’ CLAIMS IN SOCIAL MEDIA TRIAL

Advertisement
A sign outside of Meta headquarters

Meta is reportedly considering layoffs that could affect up to 20% of its workforce as the company invests heavily in artificial intelligence infrastructure. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Meta employed nearly 79,000 people as of Dec. 31, according to its latest filing.

Other major companies, including Amazon, have recently announced large-scale layoffs tied to AI developments.

In January, Amazon cut around 16,000 jobs and signaled at the time that more reductions could follow.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Advertisement
Meta AI

Meta is weighing significant workforce reductions as the tech giant ramps up spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

The company previously announced a first round of cuts totaling about 14,000 white-collar layoffs in October, bringing its corporate reductions to roughly 30,000 roles.

In making the cuts, which represented nearly 10% of its white-collar workforce, Amazon cited efficiency gains from artificial intelligence and broader cultural changes.

FOX Business’ Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Weekly Commentary: At The Brink

Published

on

Weekly Commentary: At The Brink

Weekly Commentary: At The Brink

Continue Reading

Business

Sadanand Date takes charge as Sebi executive director

Published

on

Sadanand Date takes charge as Sebi executive director
Sadanand Date assumed charge as Executive Director at Sebi on March 4 to head the investigations department, the markets regulator said on Friday.

Date is a 2007-batch IPS officer of the Uttarakhand cadre.

Prior to joining Sebi, he was on central deputation to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), where he served in several key roles, including Superintendent of Police in the Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) and Bank Securities and Fraud Cell (BSFC), the regulator said in a statement.

He also headed multiple branches in Mumbai, including the Economic Offences Branch, Special Crime Branch, Special Task Branch and Anti-Corruption Branch.

Advertisement

During his tenure with Uttarakhand Police, Date held several leadership positions and served as Superintendent of Police or Senior Superintendent of Police in various districts, such as Uttarkashi, Nainital, Haridwar, Udham Singh Nagar and Dehradun.


He also briefly served as Inspector General (Headquarters) and Director (Traffic) before moving to Sebi.
Date is a medical graduate and holds an MBBS degree from Grant Medical College & Sir JJ Group of Hospitals, Mumbai. He also holds a Master’s degree in Police Management from Osmania University, along with MA (Economics), LLB and LLM degrees from the University of Mumbai.

In addition, he is a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE). He is also a recipient of the President’s Police Medal for Meritorious Service.

Continue Reading

Business

Iran Conflict Triggers A Major Energy Shock

Published

on

Iran Conflict Triggers A Major Energy Shock

Iran Conflict Triggers A Major Energy Shock

Continue Reading

Business

Londoners 'disproportionately' affected by fraud

Published

on

Londoners 'disproportionately' affected by fraud

According to the City of London Police, some 40% of fraud victims nationally are in the capital

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025