It
takes less effort, less time, less experience and less specialised knowledge to
get good returns from equity mutual funds than it does from directly trading in
equities
There
are several benefits of investing through mutual funds instead of directly
investing in stocks. Mutual funds combine the savings of a large number of
investors and manage it as a single pool of money. So, instead of investors
worrying about which stock or bond to invest in, professional fund managers do
the job.
Equities
are complex and stocks you can buy come in a bewildering array of sectors,
industries, size, financial structure, promoter track record, competitive
scenarios and a lot more. When you invest in a fund from a good fund house,
there is a full-fledged research department to keep tabs on all this; and
there's an experienced full-time fund manager who has years --often decades --
of track record of making equity investments. Moreover, his track record is
publicly known and thoroughly analysed by researchers.
Compared
to directly picking stocks, mutual funds are a more suitable route for a lot of
people. It simply takes less effort, less time, less experience and less
specialised knowledge to get good returns from equity mutual funds than it does
from directly trading in equities.
Diversification
-- the most crucial aspect of investing -- is much easier to practice for a
fund investor. This is true of all kinds of diversification, including sectoral
and of asset type. Many fixed income asset types like bonds are simply not
available to individual investors.
Besides
time, money and diversification, there are other advantages too. Generally,
mutual funds are more tax efficient. They are certainly a lot more convenient.
Extremely beneficial methods like systematic investing (SIPs) are very hard to
implement for equities but simple for funds.
There's
a more complicated psychological problem with directly picking stocks.
Basically, what we've said here is that if you are skilled enough, then you can
do it. However, equity investors are by nature optimistic and that makes them
overestimate their own skills. That's often an expensive mistake.
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