Understanding Mutual Fund Factsheets
A mutual fund factsheet is a monthly document published by every Asset Management Company (AMC) for each scheme, providing a comprehensive snapshot of the fund'...
Understanding Mutual Fund Factsheets
A mutual fund factsheet is a monthly document published by every Asset Management Company (AMC) for each scheme, providing a comprehensive snapshot of the fund's portfolio, performance, risk metrics, and key operational details. It typically includes the fund manager's commentary, portfolio composition (top holdings and sector allocation), key financial ratios (PE, PB for equity; average maturity, modified duration for debt), risk-o-meter classification, AUM (Assets Under Management), NAV history, benchmark comparison, and SIP return tables. SEBI mandates that factsheets be updated and published monthly, and they serve as the primary document for fund analysis and comparison.
If the NAV is the heartbeat of a mutual fund, the factsheet is the full medical report. Every month, the AMC publishes this document, and reading it effectively — like a doctor reads an X-ray — is essential for sound fund analysis. SEBI requires factsheets to include NAV, AUM, expense ratio, portfolio holdings, and benchmark comparison as standard disclosures. Under the new SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations 2026, monthly disclosure of portfolio overlap is now mandatory, adding another layer of transparency. Here is what to focus on. First, the fund manager commentary — this is where the fund manager explains the market view and portfolio strategy. Reading between the lines is important: if the fund manager says "we have increased our cash allocation", it likely means they are cautious about valuations. If they say "we have rotated from IT to banking", they see value opportunities in financials. Second, the top 10 holdings and their percentage of the portfolio. If the top stock is 8-10% of AUM, the fund is concentrated — higher risk, higher potential. If the top 10 together are only 30%, the fund is well-diversified. Third, sector allocation should be checked for diversification or concentration. Fourth, risk ratios — SD, Sharpe, Beta — should be studied and compared with category averages. Fifth, for equity funds, the portfolio PE and PB ratios are important. A fund with a PE of 35 in a market where the Nifty PE is around 22-24 is overweight on growth/expensive stocks. Sixth, the risk-o-meter shows SEBI's official risk classification from "Low" to "Very High" — this must match the investor's risk profile.
A Practical Example
Consider the January 2026 factsheet of a popular flexi-cap fund. The fund manager commentary notes a reduction in IT exposure by 3% and increased allocation to auto and banking sectors due to "reasonable valuations and improving earnings outlook." Top 10 holdings make up 42% of AUM — moderately concentrated. The largest holding is Reliance Industries at 7.8%. Sector-wise, Financials are 32%, IT is 14%, Auto is 11%. Risk metrics show: SD of 14.2% (category average 15.1% — lower, good), Sharpe of 0.82 (category average 0.65 — higher, very good), Beta of 0.95 (slightly defensive). Portfolio PE is 24.5 against Nifty PE of around 22-24 — slightly premium but not excessive. AUM is ₹45,000 crores — large but manageable for a flexi-cap. SEBI norms require the factsheet to show returns for 1-year, 3-year, 5-year, and since inception periods, all compared against the benchmark. The SIP returns table shows: 1-year SIP XIRR of 22%, 3-year of 18%, 5-year of 16.5%. Risk-o-meter shows "Very High" — appropriate for a flexi-cap equity fund. This factsheet indicates the fund is well-managed, defensively positioned, and consistently outperforming on a risk-adjusted basis — suitable for an investor with a 5+ year horizon and high risk tolerance.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
Distributors should review factsheets monthly for their top recommended funds and quarterly for the rest of their coverage universe. Monthly reviews help track portfolio changes, sector rotation, and risk metric trends. However, investment decisions should not be based on a single month's factsheet — trends over 3-6 months provide a more reliable picture.
🧠 Quick Quiz
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