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    Home»Mutual Funds»The Mutual Fund Advisor: Why your mix matters more than your mutual funds – explained
    Mutual Funds

    The Mutual Fund Advisor: Why your mix matters more than your mutual funds – explained

    December 17, 2025


    The Mutual Fund Advisor: Why your mix matters more than your mutual funds - explained
    Here is the uncomfortable truth: the fund is often not the biggest decision you’re making. The mix is. (AI image)

    A mediocre fund in the right asset mix will beat a “top fund” in the wrong oneLast week, someone told me, “I only want high-return funds.” I asked her what her goal was. She said, “To not lose money.” That, in a nutshell, is why asset allocation exists. The fund is not the villain. The way we mix things is.Here is the uncomfortable truth: the fund is often not the biggest decision you’re making. The mix is.Let me put it bluntly. You can pick a genuinely excellent equity fund—disciplined, consistent, low-cost, the kind you’d proudly recommend to your cousin who forwards “market tips” at 6 AM. And then, with one innocent-looking decision, you can still turn it into a bad investment.That decision is asset allocation.Here’s the simplest way to understand asset allocation: it’s how you split your money across equity (growth), debt (stability), and sometimes gold (insurance-like diversification). Not the perfect split for your neighbour. Not the split that worked in 2020. Your split—based on your goal, your time horizon, and your tolerance for sleepless nights.And this split quietly decides two big things: how much your portfolio can grow and how much it can fall before you panic and do something expensive.Now picture this.You have a goal that’s 3 years away. Maybe it’s a house down payment, a planned expense, or just money you cannot afford to see cut in half at the wrong time.Option A: You find the “perfect” equity fund. Past returns look fantastic: 25 per cent over 3 years. Everyone in your WhatsApp group is calling it a “sure thing.” You put 90 per cent of your money into equity because, well… higher returns.Option B: You choose a more balanced mix—say 40 per cent equity and 60 per cent debt—for the same 3-year goal. And yes, the equity fund here may be merely “decent,” not the poster child of the top-performer list.Now, if the market stays kind and well-behaved, Option A will look like a genius. But markets have never signed an agreement to remain well-behaved—especially not on your timeline.If equity drops 20 per cent in year two (which is not an exotic event; it’s a normal Tuesday in market history), your 90 per cent equity portfolio doesn’t just fall on paper. It falls in your mind. Suddenly, your 3-year goal becomes a 5-year goal. Or worse, you sell at the bottom because you don’t have the luxury of waiting.Option B may not give you dinner-party bragging rights, but it does something far more valuable: it provides you with survivability. The debt portion cushions the fall, reduces the emotional drama, and—most importantly—keeps the goal achievable on time.That’s why I say: asset allocation is not a “finance concept.” It’s a behaviour-management tool. It’s the seatbelt. The fund is the engine.And here’s another truth most investors learn the hard way: in the real world, the best-performing fund is often the one you didn’t own when it fell 35 per cent, and you panicked. The best fund on paper can be the worst fund for you if it pushes you into selling at precisely the wrong time.This is also why “top fund lists” are such charming nonsense. They answer a question no sensible investor should be asking: “Which fund did best recently?” What you should ask is: “What mix will let me stay invested long enough for returns to matter?”At Value Research Fund Advisor (VRFA), this is exactly how we think about it. We don’t start by throwing a list of “best funds” at you like confetti. We begin with the more important question: what should your equity–debt allocation be for this goal? Your age, your goal horizon, and your risk comfort shape that recommendation. Only after the asset mix is set do we reach the second-order decision: which specific funds to use within that mix.Because once your allocation is sensible, fund selection becomes what it should be: important, yes—but not life-or-death.So if you remember just one line from this column, make it this: your portfolio doesn’t fail because you picked the “wrong fund” nearly as often as it fails. After all, you picked the wrong mix.Pick the right mix first. Then pick decent funds. You’ll sleep better, make fewer bad decisions, and—ironically—often end up with better outcomes than the person who chose the “best fund” and the worst allocation.And if you want a quick self-check: if you’re investing for a goal that’s 3 years away, and a 20 per cent fall would force you to sell, your asset allocation is already telling you it’s wrong.(Sneha Suri is Lead Fund Analyst – Value Research’s Fund Advisor)



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