Why You Should Play a Long Innings with Small-Cap Funds
Large-cap companies | Companies ranked from 1-100 by market capitalisation |
Mid-cap companies | Companies ranked from 101-250 by market capitalisation |
Small-cap companies | Companies ranked 251 and below by market capitalisation |
Why invest in small-cap funds?
The biggest attraction of small-cap mutual funds is their return potential. In a market rally, small-cap funds have the potential to deliver benchmark-beating returns.
Have a look at their recent performance:
Category average CAGR of small-cap funds (as of 31st December 2021)[4] | 1 year - 62.80%
3 years - 27.67% |
Returns from S&P BSE 250 Small-cap TRI[5] | 56% in 2021 |
Small-cap funds and the value of time
To make the most of small-cap funds, you need to be patient. Here’s why it pays to stay invested for a long period of time:
- To reduce the inherent volatility
Small-cap funds are prone to considerable market volatility, as mentioned earlier. With a long-term investment horizon, you are better placed to beat any short-term volatility and potentially earn good returns. This is because, with time, the investment risks even out as fund managers recalibrate and bet on the best stocks which can be profitable in the long run.
If you study the performance of the small-cap index, you will find bouts of short-term volatility with continued growth over the long-term horizon.
Source: Economic Times
In 2011, 2013, 2018 and 2019, the small-cap index did dip into the red. However, the index recovered and posted positive returns with time, often beating the large-cap and mid-cap index returns. This goes to show that you must stay invested for a while to mitigate the risks of small-cap investment and to see your portfolio deliver returns.
- To allow compounding to work its magic
Compounding gives you returns on previous returns and helps enhance the value of your portfolio. However, you need to give your mutual fund investments time for compounding to take effect. If you stay invested over the long run, your corpus could grow exponentially as compounding works its magic.
Here's an example:
Say, you invest Rs 10,000/month in a SIP of a small-cap fund today and get an average CAGR of 12%. This is how your corpus would look in 5, 10, 15 and 20 years.
Say, you invest Rs 10,000/month in a SIP of a small-cap fund today and get an average CAGR of 12%. This is how your corpus would look in 5, 10, 15 and 20 years.
Corpus after 5 years | Corpus after 10 years | Corpus after 15 years | Corpus after 20 years |
Rs. 8,11,036
| Rs. 22,40,358
| Rs. 47,59,313
| Rs. 91,98,573
|
If you compare the corpus after 5 years with the corpus after 10 years, you’ll see that the amount has grown almost threefold with just a gap of 5 years. Therefore, staying invested is the key to wealth maximisation.
- To unlock the true potential of your investment
Small-cap companies are newly established companies that typically have less historical data and shorter track records than large-cap or mid-cap companies. As a result, fund managers have to take a call on picking equity with limited data available to them. Some of these companies then merge with a larger company, and some explode in growth. But, unfortunately, some don't perform as expected and fizzle out.
With time, however, small-cap companies can hit their stride, and drive growth in any fund that invests in them. With more time and data, fund managers begin to make better, more informed decisions on increasing or decreasing their investment in small-cap equity or exit it altogether. Thus, when you remain invested in a small-cap fund, you give it time to unlock its true return potential. - To avail of tax benefits on long-term capital gains
Like other equity funds, small-cap funds also provide tax benefits on long-term capital gains if you stay invested in them for 12 months or more. After 12 months of investment, the returns that you earn are tax-free up to Rs. 1 lakh. Even if the returns exceed Rs. 1 lakh, tax is applicable on the excess at a marginal rate of 10%, even if you are in the higher tax bracket[6]. Therefore, small-cap funds can deliver tax-efficient returns if you stay invested and have a long-term horizon.
Small-cap funds are high-risk and high-return potential funds. When you give them time, they have more scope to smooth out the risks and potentially offer higher returns. Tap into the high return potential of these funds with a long-term horizon.
Disclaimer: Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme-related documents carefully.
Source links:
1. https://www.amfiindia.com/research-information/other-data/categorization-of-stocks
2. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/news/why-smallcaps-should-be-part-of-your-investment-portfolio/articleshow/84579009.cms
3. https://www.sebi.gov.in/legal/circulars/oct-2017/categorization-and-rationalization-of-mutual-fund-schemes_36199.html
4. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/marketstats/period-r1year,sortby-r1year,sortorder-desc,pageno-1,pid-127,fundtypeid-1.cms
5. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/mf/mf-news/small-cap-mutual-funds-offered-average-return-of-60-in-2021/articleshow/88537350.cms
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MUTUAL FUND INVESTMENTS ARE SUBJECT TO MARKET RISKS, READ ALL SCHEME RELATED DOCUMENTS CAREFULLY. Read more