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Rediff.com  » Getahead » 5 signs you should SELL your MF, like now!
This article was first published 13 years ago

5 signs you should SELL your MF, like now!

Last updated on: March 29, 2011 18:35 IST


Photographs: Rediff Archives Ramalingam K

It is important for a mutual fund investor to have long-term investment plans. But s/he needs to constantly verify if his mutual fund investments are helping him to achieve her/his financial objectives. You, as an investor need to keep track of how your investments in mutual funds are growing.

Also you need to make sure that you do not suffer huge losses due to non-performance.

As an investor you need to learn not only when to buy but also when to sell a mutual fund. Learning the principles of when to sell a mutual fund helps weed off investment in unprofitable mutual funds and build up a desirable and profitable portfolio of mutual fund investments.

Look at one or a combination of any of the five signs mentioned to sell your mutual funds.

Ramalingam K, an MBA (Finance) and Certified Financial Planner, is founder & director of Holistic Investment Planners (P) Ltd (http://holisticinvestment.in)

1. Chronic under performer


Investor should stay invested for long tern in a risky asset class like equity. You should wait patiently for a minimum period of five years to watch your investments grow. Making comparisons between similar funds proves futile.

However you should make a note if your fund is continuously under performing.

Comparing each of your funds with the respective fund benchmark index for various periods like two years, three years and five years helps. You may need to move out of a continuous under performer and move in to a continuous performer.

2. Changes in objectives of your mutual fund


Next, an investor like you, investing with definite financial objectives with allocation to different sectors and market capitalisation may feel uneasy and suspicious with the change in the fund's objectives that exposed you to greater risk or risk in other sectors also.

Fund takeovers, change of ownership and mergers change the level of risk in a mutual fund portfolio. So you as an investor may find your need, not met and may want to sell the fund.

This was the reason why many investors, who invested in UTI Mastergrowth Fund, sold their funds when it changed to UTI Top 100 Fund.

3. Repositioning of a fund


Though the fund has got an investment objective to invest in various market caps, so far the fund may be investing only in mid caps and positioned in the market as a large cap fund. But later, the fund may reposition the same fund as a multi cap fund and start investing in large cap stocks also.

This change may not be a suitable one for an aggressive investor.

So as an investor, you need to be careful in watching the funds after investing. That too when a fund changes its positioning, you need to keep a close track of the same to prevent your investments from any adverse effect.

4. Appreciation in investment attained


It is quite possible that your investment could have been shrewd and calculated and achieved the targeted appreciation ahead of time. I congratulate you, but would like to tell you that greediness may also make you lose on that foresighted gain.

Selling off your fund in full or part and investing in safer avenues like debt funds, fixed maturity plans and fixed deposits of companies and in banks would safeguard your money yet give you some small return.

Say you wanted to accumulate Rs 10 lakh for the higher education of your daughter/son in five years time. Your investments have appreciated to Rs 10 lakh at the end of four year itself. It is better to change it immediately to safe and non-risky investments. If you leave the investments in the same fund, it may come down in value because of the subsequent market fall.

So when the goal value has been reached, one needs to protect the appreciation by moving out from the existing risky investments and moving in to a safer investment.

5. Rebalancing based on the asset allocation


As an investor you need to maintain an overall asset allocation ratio and you need to stick to it to gain more. Sometimes your investments have appreciated and this has increased the percentage of your portfolio in equity and maybe reduced the percentage on debt and other safe avenues.

You need to realise this means that you are exposing more of your investment to the volatile equity market that was risky. This could surely be remedied with rebalancing. That is selling a portion of the over appreciated asset and reinvesting the same in the lesser-appreciated asset.

I am sure you would have understood these principles of when to sell a mutual fund. This will assist you in taking better investment decisions and achieving your financial goals.