Reliance Top 200 Fund
Category: Large Cap      Analyst 
Rating: Silver
      Investment Style: Large Growth
      Investment Process: 
Reliance Top 200 Fund invests in companies that have high/rising   ROEs and scalable business models.  
Fund Manager: Sailesh Raj Bhan  
  Reliance Top 200 Fund is a predominantly large-cap Fund. However, its investment   approach allows the manager to invest up to 30% of assets in mid-cap   stocks. While the manager stays clear of investing in small-caps, the   allocation to midcap stocks has hovered in the range of 10%-20% for a   long time now. As of July 2017, large caps accounted for almost 88% of   the portfolio.    Bhan is benchmark-aware here, but takes reasonable sector deviations   based on his top-down view. He prefers large-cap companies or companies   with large-cap capabilities while investing. Hence, he scouts for   businesses which are established, have a track record, or have dominance   in their area. The companies qualifying this criterion are usually   leaders in their respective sectors. 
The idea here is to contain risk in   the portfolio.    Currently, significant portion of the portfolio is biased towards   domestic growth recovery as Bhan believes that it is an important theme   to capitalise on over the long haul. Having said that, the fund may   struggle if this theme doesn't play out as per Bhan's expectation; the   year 2016 is a case in point. But 2016 did provide him attractive   investment opportunities and a chance to rejig the portfolio to make it   future ready. While the core structure of the portfolio was not   disturbed; the manager bought into NBFCs, healthcare, and insurance   companies given their attractive valuations.    From August 2011 (when the new strategy came in effect) through July   2017, the fund has had an impressive showing, outscoring its benchmark   index and 86% of category peers. 
Despite its underperformance in   calendar years 2013 and 2016, it boasts an impressive track record over a   three-year and five-year period. Over a 3-year period, it clocked an   annualised return of 16.1%, outperforming its benchmark index, the   S&P BSE 200 (11.7%), and 85% of peers. Similarly, over a 5-year   period, it returned 19.8% annualised, beating the benchmark index   (15.7%) and 86% of the category peers.  
  After a difficult 2011, the fund made a comeback in 2012 and had its   best year ever in a peer-relative sense, beating 96% of the competition.   Bhan's select small/mid-cap bets and investments in benchmark   heavyweights (ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank) paid off handsomely.    In 2013, the fund returned 4% and underperformed both the index and the   category average. 
A combination of factors--
Bhan's relatively higher   exposure to small/mid-caps, his underweight position in the defensive   sectors, and investment in few select stocks--led to the underwhelming   result.    While the fund had a good run in 2014 and 2015, it struggled in 2016 as   demonetisation and Bhan's bet on domestic growth didn't pan out as   expected. However, it bounced back this year and has so far (till July   2017) outperformed 89% of competition.
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