Equity Funds — Sectoral & Thematic, ELSS
Under SEBI categorization, Sectoral Funds invest a minimum of 80% in equity and equity-related instruments of a specific sector (e.g., banking, pharma, IT, infr...
Equity Funds — Sectoral & Thematic, ELSS
Under SEBI categorization, Sectoral Funds invest a minimum of 80% in equity and equity-related instruments of a specific sector (e.g., banking, pharma, IT, infrastructure). Thematic Funds invest a minimum of 80% in a broader theme that may span multiple sectors (e.g., consumption, ESG, manufacturing, rural India). ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) invests a minimum of 80% in equity per the ELSS mandate and offers tax deduction under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act (up to ₹1.5 lakh per year) with a mandatory 3-year lock-in period — the shortest lock-in among all Section 80C investment options.
An important nuance often overlooked about sectoral and thematic funds is that they are among the most mis-sold categories in the Indian mutual fund industry. There have been cases of distributors placing retired schoolteachers into pharma sector funds because "pharma always does well." That kind of advice is dangerous. Understanding when these funds make sense and when they do not is critical. Sectoral funds concentrate 80%+ of their portfolio in a single sector. When that sector is in a boom cycle, these funds deliver spectacular returns — banking sector funds have delivered 50%+ in a single year during strong cycles. But when the cycle turns, the same funds can crash 40-50%. In 2018, pharma sector funds fell 25% while the Nifty was flat. Sector funds are for experienced investors who understand business cycles and can time their entry and exit reasonably well. Under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations 2026, portfolio overlap caps of 50% have been introduced for thematic and sectoral funds across AMCs. Thematic funds are slightly broader — they invest across a theme that may include multiple sectors. An infrastructure theme could include cement, steel, capital goods, and construction companies. The diversification is better than sectoral, but the concentration risk remains significant. ELSS is the most important equity fund category from a distributor's perspective because it practically sells itself. Every salaried person in India is looking for ways to save tax under Section 80C, and ELSS offers the best combination of tax saving + wealth creation. The 3-year lock-in is actually an advantage — it forces investors to stay invested through market cycles, which is exactly what equity investing requires. A key comparison for client conversations: PPF has a 15-year lock-in, NSC has 5 years, tax-saving FD has 5 years — ELSS has just 3 years. And unlike the others, ELSS invests in equity with the potential for 12-15% long-term returns versus 7-8% from PPF. Note on taxation: equity STCG (holding period less than 1 year) is now taxed at 20%, and equity LTCG (holding period more than 1 year) is taxed at 12.5% with an exemption of ₹1.25 lakh per year.
A Practical Example
Consider the case of Amit, a 30-year-old software engineer in Hyderabad earning ₹18 lakh per annum, who approached a distributor in January looking to save tax. His CA had advised putting ₹1.5 lakh in PPF. The distributor showed him the comparison:
The math spoke for itself — same tax benefit, 3-year lock-in instead of 15, and potentially ₹22 lakh more. Amit switched to ELSS immediately.
Another common scenario: an investor named Deepak wanted to invest in a Banking Sector Fund after seeing SBI and HDFC Bank rally 30% in 6 months. A prudent advisor would explain: banking stocks have already rallied, and sector funds are for people who can analyze business cycles. Instead, letting a Flexi Cap fund manager decide how much to allocate to banking is a better approach — that is what the expense ratio pays for. When banking stocks corrected 20% the next quarter, the wisdom of that advice became evident.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
A Sectoral Fund invests 80%+ in a single sector (e.g., Banking Fund invests only in banks and financial services). A Thematic Fund invests 80%+ in a broader theme that may span multiple sectors (e.g., Infrastructure theme includes cement, steel, capital goods, construction, power). Thematic is slightly more diversified than Sectoral, but both carry significant concentration risk. Think of it this way: "Banking" is a sector; "Financial Services" (including banking, insurance, NBFCs, fintech) is a theme.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
