It is a big win for investors, as they now have access to a single source for a comprehensive disclosure template that contains a standardised set of metrics from all the fund houses
If you are over the age of 50, as I am, then the doctors suggest an annual health check-up for you. Some suggest that one should go through a comprehensive health check-up even at an earlier age.
After all, it’s a simple process requiring only a small investment of time that could be invaluable in flagging potential health risks. An integral part of the check-up is a ‘stress test’. They wire you up to an ECG machine and make you walk on a treadmill, slowly at first and then more swiftly, often on an incline. It is a simulation of stress in what would otherwise be a simple fitness test on a treadmill.
Last week saw mutual funds in India publish the results of what is referred to as the ‘results of the stress test and liquidity analysis of mid and small cap equity schemes’. The disclosure covers parameters related to volatility, valuation and portfolio turnover. Ahead of the release of this disclosure, there was nervousness among market participants about the need and concerns surrounding what the data might reveal. Not unlike the butterflies in my stomach when I nervously glance at the doctor monitoring the stress test. It takes a smile from the doctor or a thumbs-up signal to put my nervousness to rest.
The disclosure published by mutual funds, including the stress test, is based on data that is in the public domain. This data includes valuation of the benchmark, valuation of the portfolio, standard deviation of portfolio and benchmark, beta and portfolio turnover ratio. These are all published by the funds themselves and are also available through several third-party platforms and publications.
For the stress test, the calculation is based on the number of days it would take to sell the portfolio on a pro-rata basis in case of large-scale redemptions (assumed at 25 percent and 50 percent of the assets of the scheme). For this, the 20 percent least liquid securities in the portfolio are ignored and the calculation assumes the remaining holdings will be sold on a pro-rata basis.