- 1. What is a factsheet and where to find it
- 2. Top 10 holdings — concentration risk indicators
- 3. Sector allocation — what diversification really means
- 4. Standard deviation, beta, Sharpe ratio explained
- 5. Expense ratio — when 0.5% becomes ₹50 lakhs
- 6. Portfolio turnover — what it tells you about the manager
- 7. Benchmark comparison — alpha generation
- 8. Fund manager tenure and AUM trends
- 9. Five red flags that should make you exit
1. What is a factsheet and where to find it
Every mutual fund publishes a monthly factsheet — typically a 1-2 page PDF (sometimes longer for complex schemes) summarising the fund's performance, holdings, allocation, and key metrics. Most investors look only at the 1-year return on this page. The factsheet contains a dozen other numbers that matter more.
You can find the latest factsheets on:
- The fund house's website (e.g., hdfcfund.com, icicipruamc.com)
- Aggregator platforms (Moneycontrol, Value Research, Morningstar India)
- Your distributor's portal
If you're invested in any mutual fund, you should check its factsheet at least once a quarter. Annual reviews are not enough — fund managers change, holdings shift, and AUM trends matter.
2. Top 10 holdings — concentration risk indicators
The "Top 10 Holdings" section shows the biggest positions in the fund's portfolio. This tells you two important things:
What the fund actually owns: A fund called "Bluechip" might be 70% small-cap. A "Multi-cap" fund might be 90% large-cap. The factsheet shows the truth.
Concentration risk: If the top 10 holdings represent 50% of assets, the fund is well-diversified. If they represent 75%+, the fund is heavily concentrated — you're effectively betting on those 10 companies.
For most equity funds, top-10 concentration of 40-55% is healthy. Above 65% is a yellow flag for diversified funds (it's expected for sectoral or thematic funds).
3. Sector allocation — what diversification really means
True diversification is across sectors, not just companies. A fund holding 50 stocks but all in IT is concentrated. A fund holding 30 stocks across 8 sectors is diversified.
The factsheet shows sector-wise allocation as a percentage of assets. Compare to the benchmark (Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150, etc.):
- If the fund significantly overweights one sector, understand the manager's thesis
- If allocations match the benchmark closely (within 2%), you're paying active management fees for index-like performance
- If allocations vary wildly from benchmark, you're getting active bets — make sure they're informed
4. Standard deviation, beta, Sharpe ratio explained
These are the risk-adjusted return metrics. Most investors ignore them; advisors live by them.
| Metric | What It Measures | What's Good |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Deviation | How much returns vary from average | Lower = less volatile (12-15% typical for equity) |
| Beta | Volatility vs benchmark | 1 = matches market; <1 = less volatile; >1 = more volatile |
| Sharpe Ratio | Excess return per unit of risk | >1 is good, >1.5 excellent, <0.5 poor |
| Sortino Ratio | Like Sharpe but only counts downside risk | >1 typically good |
| Alpha | Excess return vs benchmark (annualised) | Positive = manager added value |
The most important: Sharpe ratio above 1 indicates the fund is delivering returns commensurate with the risk it's taking. A fund with 25% returns and Sharpe 0.4 is taking too much risk; one with 12% returns and Sharpe 1.5 is more efficient.
5. Expense ratio — when 0.5% becomes ₹50 lakhs
The expense ratio is the annual fee the fund deducts from your returns. Indian regulations cap it (around 2.25% for active equity funds, lower for index funds). The factsheet shows the current ratio.
Why a small percentage matters massively:
- 1.5% on ₹50L portfolio = ₹75,000/year drag
- Over 30 years, the difference between 0.5% (index fund) and 2% (active fund) on a ₹10K monthly SIP = approximately ₹50 lakhs of foregone wealth
For equity funds, target expense ratios:
- Index funds and ETFs: 0.10-0.40% — excellent
- Direct plans of large active funds: 0.5-1.0% — reasonable
- Regular plans of active funds: 1.5-2.0% — high, justify with performance
- Anything above 2.25%: excessive, almost never justified
6. Portfolio turnover — what it tells you about the manager
Portfolio turnover measures how often the fund manager buys and sells. Reported as a percentage; 100% means the entire portfolio was replaced once during the year.
- Under 30%: Buy-and-hold style, low transaction costs
- 30-70%: Active but disciplined, typical for most equity funds
- 70-100%: Trading-heavy, expect higher transaction costs
- Above 100%: Excessive trading; concerning unless the fund explicitly trades
High turnover doesn't always mean poor returns, but it always means higher costs and potentially higher tax events. Stable, low-turnover funds tend to compound better over decades.
7. Benchmark comparison — alpha generation
Every fund has a benchmark (Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150, etc.). The factsheet shows the fund's returns alongside the benchmark's returns over multiple periods (1Y, 3Y, 5Y, 10Y, since inception).
What to look for:
- Outperforms benchmark consistently over 5+ years: Justifies active management fees
- Outperforms benchmark short-term but lags long-term: Possibly a lucky streak; be cautious
- Tracks benchmark closely: You're paying for an index fund — switch to a real index fund and save fees
- Underperforms benchmark consistently: Exit; don't pay fees for sub-index returns
The honest reality: in India, most active equity funds have historically underperformed their benchmark over 10+ year periods. SEBI's own data confirms this. For most investors, 60-70% in low-cost index funds + 30-40% in select active funds is the right structure.
8. Fund manager tenure and AUM trends
The factsheet typically lists the fund manager and their tenure. Two things matter:
Manager tenure: If the current manager has been with the fund less than 2 years, the historical performance you're seeing was generated by someone else. Be careful relying on it.
AUM trends: Assets Under Management — the size of the fund. Look at the trend over time:
- Steady growth: Healthy fund, performing well
- Sudden spike: Maybe became "popular" — check if performance preceded the inflows or vice versa
- Sudden decline: Investors are leaving — investigate why
- Bloated size: AUM above ₹40-50K Cr for active equity funds becomes harder to manage; performance may suffer
9. Five red flags that should make you exit
- Three consecutive years of significant underperformance vs benchmark (more than 2-3% behind annually)
- Recent fund manager change — give 6-12 months to evaluate, but if no improvement, exit
- Expense ratio above 2.25% with no compensating outperformance
- Top 10 holdings exceeding 65% in a "diversified" fund
- Sharp AUM growth followed by performance decline — fund got too big to maneuver
Cardinal rule: past performance does not guarantee future returns. But poor recent performance plus structural concerns (high fees, manager change, bloated size) is a strong signal to switch.
Read your factsheets quarterly
- 1-year returns are the LEAST useful number — look at 3, 5, and 10-year returns instead.
- Expense ratio compounds against you — aim for under 1% for equity funds.
- Portfolio turnover above 100%/year suggests excessive trading.
- Sharpe ratio above 1 = good risk-adjusted returns; under 0.5 is concerning.
- Top 10 holdings exceeding 60% suggests concentration risk in a "diversified" fund.