fixed income instruments. This is important because equity gives healthy returns whereas debt gives downside protection to investors. What if the valuation of equity spikes, and the proportionate debt allocation is reduced to abysmally low? This ideally calls for an asset reallocation in order to keep the original debt-equity ratio intact.
This is what balanced advantage funds do and are therefore seen as dynamic in nature. No wonder then these funds are also referred to as ‘dynamic asset allocation’ mutual funds. Let us understand more about them.
These are hybrid mutual funds with allocation to equity and fixed income instruments in a ratio that keeps changing according to the market conditions. There are 31 schemes, which fall in the category of dynamic asset allocation funds with total assets under management (AUMs) amounting to ₹2.34 lakh crore as on Dec 31, 2023, the AMFI data reveals. In the past one year, these funds, as a category, have delivered a return of 19.50 percent, shows Morning Star data.
The 3-year annualised returns stood at 12.05 percent, Morning Star data shows. ALSO READ: How to determine asset allocation in dynamic asset allocation funds? The largest balanced advantage mutual funds based on the size of their assets under management (AUM) include HDFC Balanced Advantage Fund ( ₹75,739 crore), ICICI Prudential Balanced Advantage Fund ( ₹53,638 crore), SBI Balanced Advantage Fund (27,053 crore), Kotak Balanced Advantage Fund ( ₹15,492 crore) and Edelweiss Balanced Advantage Fund ( ₹10,179 crore). Although there are numerous advantages of investing in balanced advantage funds, or dynamic asset allocation funds.
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