ViniyogIndia offers multiple quantitative, multifactor, multi-asset portfolios tailored to investor risk-profiles
Between 1981 and 2020, the BSE Sensex produced an annualized return of 15.5% compounded, excluding dividends. 1 Lakh invested in the SENSEX on 1981 would be worth more than 3.15 Crores by 2020. Investing in Stocks is the simplest way to create sustainable wealth.
Despite high market returns, most investors failed to create wealth from Stocks!
This is due to the following reasons:
Reason 1: Behavioral Biases.
Multiple studies have revealed that there is a strong propensity for investors to buy near market highs and sell near market bottoms.
For example, the best performing equity fund from 2000 through 2010 in US (CGM Focus (CGMFX)) had an average annual return of 18.2%, according to Morningstar. During the same time, the fund’s typical shareholder lost 10%! Investors, motivated by greed and fear, poured $2.6 billion into the fund in 2007 when it was up over 80%. In 2008, when the fund was down 48%, investors redeemed over $750 million.
Human emotions negatively impact investment decisions. A disciplined, quantitative approach to investing can reduce the influence of biases.
Reason 2: Wrong or No strategies
More educated investors today and are trying to design portfolios based on value investing principles following Buffet-Munger-Graham. How do they fare?
If we go by hard data, value investing hasn’t worked in India for the past 10 years. Credible research further suggests, investing in small-cap stocks, does not work in India. And if you are considering to invest in high beta stocks, the story is even worse. None of these three popular strategies worked in the Indian markets in the past decade!
While market efficiency remains a myth, every market is different: Factors that worked well in the US, may not necessarily work in India. Knowledge of which factors work consistently in Indian markets is key, and the only way to figure that out is to back-test strategies over a sizable past data.
At ViniyogIndia.com, we just do that!
Biswarup Sinha Ray, founder of ViniyogIndia.com & SEBI registered advisor.
A smallcase is a curated basket of stocks/ETFs* that reflects a certain objective (ideas, themes, strategies), backed by the research of the smallcase manager. You can invest in a smallcase in 2 clicks.
*ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) are baskets of securities that track an underlying index (Nifty, Gold, etc) and can be bought and sold on the exchange.
The smallcase manager decides who can invest in the smallcases created by them and can create two types of smallcases :
You can buy smallcases on any of the partner brokers. Select a smallcase, select your broker and invest in less than 2 clicks.
Our partner brokers are:
Zerodha, AxisDirect, Edelweiss, HDFC Securities, Kotak Securities, IIFL Securities, 5 Paisa, Aliceblue, Angel Broking, Trustline, Upstox, Motilal Oswal, Groww, ICICI Direct, Fundzbazar and Dhan
If you have a trading & demat account with one of the supported brokers, you can start investing in smallcases. By clicking on ‘Buy smallcase’ or ‘Login’, you can view the supported brokers and login with the respective credentials. The funds from your broker account would be used for investing in smallcases.
Once you login with your broker credentials, you can use your trading account to buy and sell smallcases. The stocks would be credited to your broker linked demat account.
Further, once you’re logged in, you can securely use the funds available in your broker account to invest in smallcases.
The funds from your broker account are utilised to invest in smallcases and the respective stocks are credited to your broker linked demat account.
Once you have invested, the index value of the smallcase is set to 100 on the buy day for easy tracking. You can monitor the performance of the smallcase from the Investments page on the broker’s smallcase platform.
Also, each smallcase is reviewed periodically and rebalanced to ensure your objective is on track.
The index value of a smallcase indicates the absolute price returns of that particular smallcase from the date of its inception. The index value is set to 100 on the inception date of the smallcase. The current index value shows by how much it has gone up since then.
When buying a smallcase, an index value of 100 is assigned to it. Overtime, if the index value is 108.54, you can easily deduce that your smallcase has generated a total return of 8.54%.
The Details view shows you a more detailed investment overview and P&L breakdown. You can also track individual stock details from the Investments page.
There are no lock-in periods, so you may sell your smallcases anytime. As a concept however, smallcases work best when used for long-term investing.
Exclusive smallcases can be subscribed directly from the smallcase profile by following the steps below :
Rebalancing is the process of ensuring the weights of the stocks in the smallcase continue to be true to the underlying smallcase strategy. The rebalance frequency is decided by the creator of the smallcase. You can update your smallcase in 2 clicks to ensure your smallcase is on track with the strategy.
You can request access for an exclusive smallcase by filling up the request invite form on the smallcase profile.
When we invite you to invest in a smallcase, you can buy the smallcase in 2clicks. Invite for multiple smallcases can also be requested.
When we invite you to invest in a smallcase, you can buy the smallcase in 2 clicks. Invite for multiple smallcases can also be requested.
You can also set up an SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) for your smallcases on a weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual basis. The SIP orders will not be placed automatically and will require you to place orders each time an instalment is due. We are working on making this automated soon.
To invest more in a smallcase from your Investments page, click on the smallcase you want to invest more in and click the Invest More button on the right.
No, with smallcases - you are essentially buying exchange listed securities which are exposed to market risks. Investing in market instruments involves risks and investments may lose value.
Also, the returns shown for smallcases are the historical returns. smallcases do not have any projected returns shown. Past performance does not guarantee future returns.
From the individual smallcase page, you can find the Exit option at the right under More Actions. You can then choose a whole exit (sell all the constituents of a smallcase and exit completely) or a partial exit (book some profits while maintaining the minimum amount).
Note: Partial Exit can only be done if you’ve invested more than the minimum amount into the smallcase.
Orders are unfilled under the following circumstances:
Note: Partial Exit can only be done if you’ve invested more than the minimum amount into the smallcase.
Repairing the batch helps you place fresh orders for those constituents that were not filled so your smallcase can be complete. For stocks that are already sold on the broker platform, contact the support team to reconcile your holdings.
Archiving a batch excludes those stocks that you have unfilled orders for and completes your smallcase without placing fresh orders.
In this case, the smallcase will not be the same as the original version you meant to buy/invest more/rebalance/exit & will differ in composition & returns.
One of the payment method available to subscribe to a fee based smallcase is eNACH where an e-Mandate is created.
If you want to cancel your e-Mandate(s) linked with any of your fee based smallcase subscription, please drop an email to publisher.help@smallcase.com with the following details:
We will share the mandate(s) details in response to your request including the below:
To proceed with the cancellation of the mandate, we would require your confirmation by email after verifying the mandate and payment details.
After receiving your confirmation, we will process the mandate cancellation and update you with the status within 72 hours.