Relative Underperformance
from an article in Financial Express
Fund managers are facing a dilemma in India's booming stock market: should they risk buying pricey shares, or sit on cash and wait for a correction and possibly be left behind as shares keep climbing.
"We are trying to be pragmatic and invest bit by bit," said N. Sethuram, chief investment officer of SBI Mutual Fund, who has only invested 40 per cent of $645 million raised in December.
"If we don't invest, we will become underperformers in relation to the market," said Sethuram, whose fund manages $2.9 billion in assets.
Many fund managers share his anguish. Domestic funds have collected about $2 billion in the past three months, but they have invested only part of it because of concerns that valuations are too stretched.
Fund managers are facing a dilemma in India's booming stock market: should they risk buying pricey shares, or sit on cash and wait for a correction and possibly be left behind as shares keep climbing.
"We are trying to be pragmatic and invest bit by bit," said N. Sethuram, chief investment officer of SBI Mutual Fund, who has only invested 40 per cent of $645 million raised in December.
"If we don't invest, we will become underperformers in relation to the market," said Sethuram, whose fund manages $2.9 billion in assets.
Many fund managers share his anguish. Domestic funds have collected about $2 billion in the past three months, but they have invested only part of it because of concerns that valuations are too stretched.