How to design a SIP portfolio
At FundsIndia.com, we provide an online investment platform, and we offer free Partner services. One of the most frequent advisory questions that we get from our investors is typically this - "I can save x thousand dollars every month. I would like to invest in mutual funds through SIP. Please suggest some funds for me". We are delighted to get such mails because systematic investments in mutual funds are the best way to turn savings into efficient investment vehicles. In this article, let me talk about a simple method to construct a good SIP portfolio.
1. First, decide upon the asset allocation - By asset allocation what I mean is how much money goes every month into what kind of mutual fund. It is possible to
get very complicated with this, but to keep it simple you can focus on just three types of funds - large-cap oriented funds, small/mid-cap funds and debt funds.
A typical allocation would be 50% in large-cap oriented funds, 20-30% in small-mid/cap oriented funds, and the rest in debt funds. To ensure stable and optimal
returns, every SIP portfolio should have some debt fund component in it. It can just be a small portion - 20-25% of the monthly investment, if your portfolio is
an aggressive portfolio for the long term.
2. Second, decide upon the number of schemes in your portfolio - Given the fact that we have three prime asset classes as above, your portfolio should have at
least three schemes in it. On the upper side, it should not have more than seven-eight schemes. More than that, and your portfolio becomes difficult to track
and manage. Ideally, a portfolio would have five schemes - four equity schemes, and one debt scheme.
3. Third, decide on the schemes - this is the last thing to do while designing the portfolio, not the first. Once you know what kind of schemes you are looking
for and how many of each kind (from steps 1 and 2 above), this step becomes a simple choice. You can go to research websites like valueresearchonline.com or
Mint 50 and look at their top rated funds. You can simply pick one or two in each class that you are interested in and you'll have your portfolio ready!
Let us take a simple example and walk through the process to illustrate. Suppose you want to invest Rs. 10,000 a month in a moderately risky portfolio of mutual fund schemes for the next 3-5 years. We can decide to go with a 70% equity, 30% debt portfolio. In equity, we can decide to have 50% large-cap oriented allocation and 20% small-mid-cap oriented allocation. We will need two large-cap oriented schemes (Rs. 2,500 each), one small/mid-cap scheme (Rs. 2000) and one debt scheme (Rs. 3000) to invest in.
Asset class |
Number of schemes |
Total SIP amount |
Scheme choices |
Large-cap equity |
2 |
Rs. 5,000 |
HDFC Top 200 |
Small/Mid-cap equity |
1 |
Rs. 2,000 |
ICICI Discovery |
Debt |
1 |
Rs. 3,000 |
Templeton India Short term Income fund |
Sample SIP portfolio
We see that we can choose two funds from the top rated funds in each of these categories. For large-cap oriented funds, from DSP Blackrock Top 100, HDFC Top 200, Birla Sunlife frontline equity and Reliance regular savings fund - equity; for small/mid-cap funds, from ICICI Discovery and DSP Blackrock Small Midcap fund; for debt funds, Templeton India Short term income fund.
As we can see, putting together a well-diversified, balanced portfolio such as this is very easy. A regular, systematic investment done for the long run in such a portfolio would be a great way for investors to convert their monthly savings into a great investment portfolio. Happy investing!