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Portfolio Diversification India: How Many Funds Is Too Many?

Learn portfolio diversification in India the right way. Discover how many mutual funds you actually need and why over-diversification hurts your returns.

Portfolio Diversification India: How Many Funds Is Too Many?

Most Indian mutual fund investors make the same mistake: they think more funds equals better portfolio diversification india. In reality, holding 12-15 different equity funds often creates less diversification than holding 2-3 well-chosen ones. This guide explains how diversification actually works, how many funds you genuinely need, and what over-diversification (also called “diworsification”) costs you in returns and complexity.

How Portfolio Diversification Actually Works

Diversification reduces risk by combining assets that do not move together perfectly. When stock A falls 20% and stock B rises 10%, a portfolio holding both falls less than a portfolio holding only stock A. The key is correlation – assets that are highly correlated with each other provide little real diversification benefit.

This is why holding 10 different large-cap equity mutual funds in India provides almost no diversification benefit. All large-cap funds in India hold Nifty 50 stocks with similar weights – they are highly correlated. Adding a fifth large-cap fund to a portfolio with four large-cap funds adds expense ratios and complexity without adding diversification. The same Rs 10,000 per month invested in one Nifty 50 index fund is better diversified than Rs 2,000 each in five actively managed large-cap funds.

The Optimal Number of Mutual Funds for Indian Investors

Portfolio Size Suggested Number of Funds What They Cover
Under Rs 5 lakh 2-3 funds 1 large-cap/flexicap equity + 1 short-term debt
Rs 5-25 lakh 3-4 funds Large-cap + mid-cap equity + debt + optional gold
Rs 25-1 crore 4-6 funds Large-cap + mid-cap + small-cap + international + 2 debt
Above Rs 1 crore 6-8 funds Above + real assets (REIT ETF), sector tactical

These are maximum numbers – many investors do very well with fewer. Warren Buffett’s advice of a two-fund portfolio (S&P 500 index + short-term bond index) adapted to India would be: Nifty 50 index fund + short-duration debt fund. This two-fund approach beats most retail investors’ complex multi-fund portfolios over a 10-year period. Consistent SIP into a simple portfolio creates more wealth than over-optimized fund selection with frequent changes.

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True Diversification: Asset Classes, Not Just Funds

Real portfolio diversification in India means spreading across asset classes that behave differently in various economic conditions:

  • Indian equity: Grows best during Indian economic expansion. Falls during domestic or global crises. High long-term return potential, high short-term volatility.
  • International equity (US/global): Provides geographic diversification. When Indian markets underperform (rupee weakness, domestic slowdown), US markets may outperform. Nifty 50 and S&P 500 have low correlation over most periods.
  • Debt (bonds and fixed income): Provides stability during equity crashes. Government bonds sometimes rally when equities fall (flight to safety). Corporate bonds provide higher yield with some credit risk.
  • Gold: Crisis hedge. Rises during severe equity downturns, geopolitical crises, and currency weakness. Low correlation with equity over short periods.
  • Real estate (REITs): Provides income (mandatory dividend distribution) and inflation hedge. Low correlation with equity in some periods. Indian REITs like Embassy, Mindspace, and Nexus are accessible through stock exchange listings.

Over-Diversification: The Cost of Too Many Funds

Over-diversification – holding too many funds with overlapping portfolios – has real costs:

  • Higher average expense ratios: If you hold some direct index funds (0.1% expense ratio) and some regular plan active funds (1.5-2%), the average weighted expense ratio of your portfolio increases. Simplifying to fewer, low-cost direct index funds reduces your expense drag.
  • Portfolio monitoring complexity: Tracking 12 funds, reviewing performance, deciding when to exit underperformers, and maintaining correct SIP amounts across all of them is error-prone. Simpler portfolios are better maintained.
  • Tax complexity: Each fund generates separate capital gains calculations with different holding periods. A 6-fund portfolio creates less tax complexity than a 15-fund portfolio, especially when rebalancing.
  • Regression to benchmark: As you add more equity funds, your portfolio increasingly resembles the Nifty 500 index but with higher costs. You would have been better served by just buying a Nifty 500 index fund directly.

NPS provides automatic diversification within its managed funds across equity, corporate bonds, and government securities – making it a low-maintenance option for the retirement portion of your portfolio without adding fund-selection complexity.

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Portfolio Overlap: How to Check If Your Funds Are Truly Diversified

Two funds can hold identical top-10 stocks despite different names. Check portfolio overlap before adding a new fund:

  • Use tools like Value Research Online or Morningstar India to compare holdings between two funds.
  • If two funds share 70%+ of their top-20 holdings, they are highly correlated and the second adds little diversification benefit.
  • Large-cap funds in India typically have 60-80% overlap with each other because all hold Reliance, HDFC Bank, Infosys, ICICI Bank in their top positions.
  • A Nifty 50 index fund + a Nifty Midcap 150 index fund have low overlap because they track different segments.

Building a Simple, Well-Diversified Indian Portfolio

A genuinely diversified Indian investor portfolio with 4-5 instruments covers all major asset classes:

  1. Nifty 50 or Nifty 100 index fund (Direct Plan): Core large-cap equity exposure. Low cost (0.1-0.2% expense ratio). This is the foundation.
  2. Nifty Midcap 150 or Small-cap index fund: Additional equity growth potential. Higher volatility, suitable for 10+ year horizon.
  3. International fund (S&P 500 or Nasdaq 100): Geographic diversification. Hedges against India-specific risks and rupee depreciation.
  4. Short-duration debt fund or PPF: Stability component. PPF for long-term debt (EEE tax treatment), short-duration debt fund for accessible medium-term savings.
  5. Sovereign Gold Bond or Gold ETF: 5-10% allocation. Crisis hedge.

This 5-instrument portfolio gives you Indian large-cap equity, Indian mid/small equity, international equity, debt, and gold – covering all four major asset classes with minimal overlap and low costs. Tax efficiency of each instrument should be considered alongside return potential when finalizing your allocation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is holding 10 mutual funds considered well-diversified?

Not necessarily. 10 large-cap equity funds with similar holdings provide less real diversification than 3 funds across different asset classes. True diversification is about holding assets with low correlation – equity, debt, gold, international – not about the number of funds within one asset class. A 4-fund portfolio (Nifty 50 index + Nifty Midcap index + debt fund + gold ETF) is genuinely diversified. A 10-fund portfolio of all Indian equity funds is not.

Should I have both a Nifty 50 and a Sensex fund?

No. Nifty 50 (NSE‘s top 50 stocks) and Sensex (BSE‘s top 30 stocks) overlap by 95%+ since both contain India’s largest companies. Holding both is duplication, not diversification. The 20 additional stocks in Nifty 50 versus Sensex make negligible difference. Pick one and eliminate the other. If you have both for historical reasons, consolidate into one index fund to simplify your portfolio.

How do I know if my portfolio is over-diversified?

Signs of over-diversification: you cannot explain what each fund does and why it belongs; your returns closely track the Nifty 500 but you pay higher expense ratios than a Nifty 500 index fund; you have 3+ funds in the same category (3 large-cap funds, 4 balanced advantage funds); you rarely review your portfolio because it is too complex. The cure is consolidation – identify your best 4-6 funds across different asset classes, redirect SIPs to them, and let the others mature without adding fresh money.

What is the minimum number of funds needed for a complete Indian portfolio?

Two funds can build a complete portfolio: a Nifty 50 index fund (70-80% allocation) and a short-duration debt fund or liquid fund (20-30% allocation). This two-fund portfolio covers equity and debt, keeps costs minimal, and requires almost no maintenance. It beats most retail investors’ complex portfolios over 10-15 years purely due to lower costs and fewer behavioral mistakes. Adding a gold ETF as a third component makes it nearly complete for most financial goals.

Does SIP in multiple funds at the same time dilute returns?

SIP in multiple truly diversified funds does not dilute returns – it simply applies rupee-cost averaging to each asset class separately. The risk of SIP in multiple funds is over-complication and overlap, not dilution per se. If you have Rs 20,000 per month to invest and split it as Rs 8,000 in Nifty 50 + Rs 6,000 in Nifty Midcap + Rs 4,000 in a debt fund + Rs 2,000 in a gold ETF, this is well-allocated SIP diversification. Splitting Rs 20,000 across 10 equity funds with similar portfolios is over-complication without benefit.

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Dhruva is the founding editor of LearnFineEdge, an India-first personal finance education site. He writes and edits practical guides on Indian tax (old vs new regime, ITR filing, Section-specific deductions), retirement planning (NPS, NPS Vatsalya, PPF, EPF), mutual fund investing (SIP, lumpsum, index vs active funds), insurance basics (term vs ULIP vs endowment), credit discipline (CIBIL score, EMI hygiene), and the SEBI rule framework that shapes retail F&O, REITs, and crypto VDA taxation in India.Scope of expertise: household personal finance education for Indian readers, with an emphasis on rule-based frameworks (the 25x FIRE rule applied to Indian inflation, the BTID life-insurance comparison, the tax-regime break-even calculator) rather than predictions or stock calls.What Dhruva does not do: personal investment advice, stock tips, buy or sell recommendations, model portfolios, or paid research. LearnFineEdge is not a SEBI-registered Investment Adviser and not a SEBI-registered Research Analyst. Articles are educational; readers making individual decisions should consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser, a chartered accountant, or a qualified insurance professional as appropriate.For corrections to any article, see the Corrections Policy. Editorial standards, sourcing, and the expert-review process are described in the Editorial Policy and the Fact-Checking Policy.Connect: LinkedIn · X (Twitter) · Contact editorial

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