True Beacon, which invests only in large-cap stocks and is up
about 21% this year, is adding shares of software exporters and pharmaceutical
companies.
A top-performing Indian
hedge fund that was bold enough to load up local shares in the depth of the
March selloff is now turning cautious on the country’s stock market after a
stellar rebound.
True Beacon One,
which manages about Rs 3 billion ($40 million) of Indian equities, has trimmed
its bullish bets on stocks and is keeping 80% of its investments hedged,
according to Nikhil Kamath, the co-founder and chief investment officer of the
fund. The one-year-old fund has outperformed the NSE Nifty 50 Index by 29% this
year, making it one of the best performers among local peers, data provided by
the asset manager show.
“At the current
juncture, we believe that markets have run up ahead of fundamentals, we see
significant pain in businesses on the ground,” Kamath said in an interview.
“Still, the same is not accurately reflected in stock prices. Investors at this
point have become a bit too callous and are ignoring underlying fundamentals.”
The Nifty
50 index has bounced about 50% since the coronavirus-induced swoon in
March, beating the Asia Pacific benchmark and almost on par with the gains in
US shares. The rebound has drawn retail investors that have bid up penny stocks
and riskier companies, overlooking the dire state of the economy ravaged by the
pandemic and the fact that India has the third-highest number of coronavirus
cases in the world.
True Beacon, which
invests only in large-cap stocks and is up about 21% this year, is adding shares
of software exporters and pharmaceutical companies. Reliance Industries Ltd. is
another one that the fund had been adding. It is the only Indian alternative to
the so-called FAANG companies, the quintet of Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix
and Google, Kamath said.
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