
Designing equity funds to meet life goals
The Hindu
There is a need for a fund that is managed based on a transparent, profit-taking rule
Asset management companies (AMCs) are planning to introduce funds that intend to take exposure ranging from Internet of things to sustainable healthcare and cloud computing.
Yet, retail investors need investment products that can help them meet their life goals such as buying a house and taking an exotic vacation. In this article, we look at how an equity fund can be structured to enable investors to meet their life goals.
Suppose you invest in a growth option of an equity fund because it is tax-efficient compared with the income distribution-cum-capital withdrawal option (previously called dividend option). The issue is that you are unsure of when to redeem your units and realise gains. This uncertainty exists even if you have a clear time horizon to achieve your goal. Suppose you invest to achieve a goal in 10 years. What if you have 30% unrealised gains on your investments in two years? Should you take profits or continue with your investments?
If you take profits and the market continues to move upward, you experience regret. Knowing that this is possible, you may want to avoid such regret today and, hence, decide against redeeming the units. But what if the market tanks? You could easily lose your unrealised gains. For instance, a 33% decline in your equity investments will wipe-out unrealised gains of 50%! That means you cannot accumulate large unrealised gains in your equity investments. And yet, you cannot redeem all your units in an equity fund. Why? If you do so, your investments cannot grow at a higher rate than bank deposits. And that means you cannot achieve your goal unless you increase your capital contribution! So, what should you do?
The required return on your goal-based investment is a function of your savings, your asset allocation, the expected return on each of those asset classes, the time horizon for your goal and the amount required to achieve the goal. Typically, goal-based portfolios must have equity and bonds. Because your bond investments will be in fixed deposits, the expected return and actual return will be the same ignoring credit risk.
The expected return on equity is based on past returns experience, independent of your risk attitude and other factors mentioned above. This allows AMCs to create equity funds with simple profit-taking rule based on expected return.
Suppose the expected pre-tax return on equity is 12%.

Insurance penetration and density are often misunderstood and do not reveal how many families are insured or whether they would be financially secure if the main earning member were to die. The real issue is not reach but adequacy, as households may have life insurance but not enough cover to replace lost income, leaving them financially vulnerable.












