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SPIVA® India Year-End 2017

SPIVA® Japan Year-End 2017

SPIVA® Europe Year-End 2017

SPIVA® U.S. Year-End 2017

SPIVA® Latin America Scorecard Year-End 2017

SPIVA® India Year-End 2017

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Akash Jain

Director, Global Research & Design

S&P Dow Jones Indices

SUMMARY

  • S&P Dow Jones Indices has been the de facto scorekeeper of the ongoing active versus passive debate since the first publication of the S&P Indices Versus Active Funds (SPIVA) U.S. Scorecard in 2002. Over the years, we have built on our experience publishing the report by expanding scorecard coverage into Australia, Canada, Europe, India, Japan, Latin America, and South Africa.
  • The SPIVA India Scorecard compares the performance of actively managed Indian mutual funds with their respective benchmark indices over 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year investment horizons. In this scorecard, we studied the performance of three categories of actively managed equity funds and two categories of actively managed bond funds over the 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods ending in December 2017.
  • Amid rising inflation and bond yields, foreign portfolio investors withdrew INR 21 billion from the Indian equity market and added INR 546 billion to the Indian debt market over the six-month period ending in December 2017.
  • In 2017, the S&P BSE 100, which seeks to measure the large-cap equity market performance in India, jumped 33.3%, while the mid-cap equity market, as tracked by the S&P BSE MidCap, returned 49.9%. The S&P BSE India Government Bond Index delivered a total return of 3.8% over the same period.
  • Over the one-year period ending in December 2017, 59.38% of Indian Equity Large-Cap funds underperformed their benchmark, whereas 72.09% of the Indian Equity Mid-/Small-Cap funds underperformed their benchmark.
  • Indian Large-Cap Equity Funds: Over the 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods ending in December 2017, 59.38%, 53.00%, 43.40%, and 53.54% of large-cap equity funds in India underperformed the S&P BSE 100, respectively. Over the 10-year period studied, survivorship rate and style consistency were low, at 70.08 % and 28.35%, respectively. The asset-weighted fund return was 87 bps higher than the equalweighted fund return, and the return spread between the first and the third quartile break points of the fund performance was 3.23%.

  • Indian Equity-Linked Saving Schemes (ELSS): Most actively managed funds outperformed the S&P BSE 200 across all observed time horizons. Over the 10-year period ending in December 2017, the survivorship rate was 96.55%. The asset-weighted fund return was 53 bps higher than the equal-weighted fund return, and the return spread between the first and the third quartile break points of the fund performance was 4.25%.
  • Indian Mid-/Small-Cap Equity Funds: Over the 1- and 3-year periods ending in December 2017, the majority of the actively managed mid-/small-cap equity funds in India underperformed the S&P BSE MidCap. In contrast, only 44.29% of the funds lagged the S&P BSE MidCap over the 10-year period, but the survivorship rate and style consistency were low, at 70.00% and 30.00%, respectively. For the same period, the asset-weighted fund return was 12 bps higher than the equal-weighted fund return, and the return spread between the first and the third quartile break points of the fund performance was 4.44%.
  • Indian Government Bond Funds: Over the 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods, 62.79%, 75.93%, 74.00%, and 84.75% of the actively managed funds in this peer group underperformed the S&P BSE Indian Government Bond Index, respectively. Over the 10-year period ending in December 2017, survivorship rate and style consistency were at 48.33% and 45.00%, respectively. For the same period, the asset-weighted fund return was 47 bps higher than the equal-weighted fund return, and the return spread between the first and the third quartile break points of the fund performance was 1.41%.
  • Indian Composite Bond Funds: Over the 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods ending in December 2017, 33.94%, 74.63%, 85.19%, and 90.48% of the actively managed funds in this category lagged the S&P BSE India Bond Index. Over the 10-year period, survivorship rate and style consistency were at 68.24% and 35.29%, respectively. For the same period, the asset-weighted fund return was 6 bps lower than the equal-weighted fund return, and the return spread between the first and the third quartile break points of the fund performance was 1.39%.
  • Fund Survivorship: A large percentage (about 30%) of the funds in all other categories, except ELSS, failed to survive the 10-year investment horizon. Indian Government Bond funds had the lowest survival rate, at 48.33%, while Indian ELSS funds had the highest survival rate, at 96.55%.
  • Style Consistency: Indian Equity Large-Cap and Indian Equity Mid-/Small-Cap categories were the least consistent in style, at 28.35% and 30.00%, respectively, over the 10-year period ending in December 2017. Both categories of bond funds witnessed low style consistency over the same period, while Indian ELSS funds was the only category with high style consistency (96.55%).
  • Average Fund Returns: In the one-year period ending in December 2017, both equal- and assetweighted returns of the Indian Equity Large-Cap, Indian Equity Mid-/Small-Cap, and Indian Government Bond categories were lower than their respective benchmarks. In contrast, the Indian ELSS and Indian Composite Bond categories delivered higher equal- and asset-weighted returns than their respective benchmarks over the same period. Over the 10-year period, the largest outperformance relative to its benchmark was witnessed in the Indian Equity Mid/Small-Cap fund category, where asset-weighted returns were 2.38% higher than the benchmark.

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