When designing an investment portfolio, one of the key decisions investors face is how to allocate their assets across different security types to create a comprehensive investment portfolio. Mutual funds are comprehensive investment vehicles which can help investors to design their investment portfolios keeping in mind diversification, simplicity and cost. Depending on the risk appetite, investment objectives and time horizon, an investment portfolio can be designed using active mutual funds, index mutual funds or a combination of both. Each approach offers distinct advantages and trade-offs. In this article, we explain what active and index funds are, how they work, and the pros and cons of each in helping investors to make informed asset allocation decisions.
Index funds aim to replicate the performance of a market index, such as the NIFTY 50 or NIFTY Midcap. They aim to match the market, not beat it, and can be structured either as mutual funds or ETFs (exchange traded funds).
Active funds are mutual funds or ETFs managed by professional fund managers which aim to outperform a specific benchmark index. Professional fund managers use research, market trends and economic indicators to make investing decisions. The goal is generating alpha, or returns above the benchmark. This comes with high costs, volatility and the risk of underperformance.