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Showing posts with the label asset allocation

Diagnosing the investors’ pain - 2

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As I mentioned yesterday ( see here ) the pain being felt presently by the non-institutional investors is disproportionately high. For the investors and traders who have spent a short period of time in the market, mostly those who started investing in post Covid period, the pain may be actual, while for those who have been investing for a long time, the pain might only be notional due to perception of relative underperformance or loss of opportunity cost. Over exposure to small cap stocks While large caps account for ~60–63% of total and free-float market capitalization, retail participation in this segment has been relatively muted. Institutional investors—both domestic and foreign—continue to dominate ownership and trading activity in large caps. As a result, price discovery here has been more orderly, liquidity deeper, and drawdowns relatively contained. In contrast, non-institutional investors (retail investors, HNIs, family offices, and smaller proprietary books) have had di...

Navigating Volatility Without Losing the Plot

Over the past few weeks, Indian financial markets have begun to show unmistakable signs of stress. While the benchmark indices such as the Nifty and Sensex have largely managed to hold their ground, the underlying market tone tells a very different story. A significant number of small- and mid-cap stocks have undergone sharp price corrections, exposing the fragility beneath what still appears, on the surface, to be a resilient market. This divergence between benchmark indices and broader market performance is often an early signal of rising investor discomfort. And this time, the discomfort has morphed into something closer to panic. The anatomy of the current panic The most pronounced damage has been in momentum-driven stocks, many of which were heavily owned by non-institutional investors. As liquidity dried up, these stocks witnessed not just steep price declines but also an absence of buyers, exacerbating the fall. This is a familiar pattern: assets that rise rapidly on optimism an...

Alternatives continue to remain attractive

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Traditionally, the asset allocators have considered the potential return of the various alternatives (to equity and fixed income) to determine the portfolio structure of investors. Of course, the factors like size of portfolio, feasibility of investing in assets like real estate, risk appetite of individual investor, and liquidity requirements etc., influence the allocation to some alternatives. However, dematerialization of assets like real estate (through REITS), Gold (ETF) Bonds (bond funds, RBI direct investment platform etc.) now makes the alternatives relevant even for small investors. In the past one year, the alternatives assets (e.g., gold, bitcoin) have performed significantly better than equities. Even the average yield of long duration bond funds has been similar to the Nifty50 return. The investors may therefore want to evaluate the return prospects of these alternatives in future to determine their asset allocation strategy.   In this context, I note the following to ...

2HFY22 – Market outlook and Strategy

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Fear, paranoia and resilience prevails in 1HFY22 The financial year FY22 started with the country reeling under the impact of an intense second wave of Covid-19 pandemic. The images of citizens struggling for life saving drugs and Oxygen, overcrowded cremation grounds and corpses of the victims of pandemic floating in the Ganges were imprinted on peoples’ consciousness. For once, disease, death, and desperation dominated the popular narrative. The life seemed still with everyone becoming fearful and paranoid. It felt that spirituality and austerity would dominate the behavior of common man for many months to come. The government went into overdrive to build health infrastructure, provide assistance to helpless citizens and planned, what would eventually become, the biggest public vaccination drive ever in history of mankind. The austerity and fiscal discipline did not appear to be anywhere in the list of top priorities. The macro economic data for 1QFY22 however presented a sligh...

Do not let FOMO overwhelm you

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 Presently, a large part of the market analysis and commentary is focused on the stock rally from the low prices recorded in March 2020. The popular narrative is that investors have made extraordinary return on their equity portfolios, in what was a once in a decade opportunity. In my view, this narrative suffers from a serious lacuna. This narrative assumes that— (a)    Investment is a discreet process and not a continuous one. Investors make investments only on occurrence of some event and exit as soon as the impact of that event dissipates. (b)    The economic behavior of a majority of investors is rational. They are able to control the emotions of greed and fear very well. (c)     Most of the investors have infinite pool of investible surplus, and they are able to invest material amount of money at their will. Unfortunately, none of these is even half true. Investment is a continuous process. Most of the investors stay fully invest...

FY22 – Investment Strategy

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I shared my investment strategy with readers in December 2020. I expected 2021 to be one of the most difficult years for investors in terms of high volatility, poor expected returns from diversified portfolios and continued low return expectations from cash and debt. After 3months into the year, I am even more confident about my view. I continue to believe that to generate normal return on the financial asset portfolio one would need to maintain a certain degree of flexibility in portfolio. A part of the portfolio may be dedicated to active trading, at least in 1HFY22. I am therefore not changing my investment strategy for next 6months at least. I may share my current investment strategy as follows: Asset allocation I shall continue to maintain high flexibility in my portfolio, by keeping 30% of my portfolio as floating, while maintaining an UW stance of equity and debt. Large floating allocation implies that I shall be trading actively in equity. (a)   The fixed e...

Move to cyclicals - value hunting or something else?

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 I remind myself of this narration almost every market cycle. I think, it is the time to reiterate once again. Have you ever been to vegetable market after 9:30PM? The market at 9:30PM is very different from the market at 5:30PM. At 5:30PM, the market is less crowded. The produce being sold is good and fresh. The customer has larger variety to choose from. The customer is also at a liberty to choose the best from the available stock. The vendors are patient and polite, and willing to negotiate the prices. As the day progresses, the crowd increases. The best of the stuff is already sold. Prices begin to come down slowly. The vendors now become little impatient and less polite and mostly in "take it or leave it" mode. By 9:30PM, most of the stuff is already sold, and only inferior quality residue is left. The vendors are in a hurry to wind up the shops and go back home. The prices are slashed. There is big discount on buying large quantities. Vendors are aggressive and ve...