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    Home»Mutual Funds»5 ways multi-asset funds beat volatility and ruled 2025; what to expect in 2026
    Mutual Funds

    5 ways multi-asset funds beat volatility and ruled 2025; what to expect in 2026

    December 29, 2025


    Amid a topsy-turvy run in capital markets in 2025, investors remained confident in mutual funds. Assets managed by open-ended mutual fund schemes rose from Rs.67 trillion to Rs.80.5 trillion till November end. Gold ETF assets more than doubled as the precious metal scaled new peaks. Equity scheme inflows persisted through the ups and downs of the stock market, with investors maintaining faith in Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) commitments. Passive strategies gained further prominence. But the stars of most investors’ portfolios this year were multi-asset funds, while the newly minted income-plus-arbitrage funds found many takers. The regulator also stepped in to overhaul MF rules.

    Multi-asset funds hold well

    Amid a prolonged lull in the equity market, multi-asset funds have proved their mettle. Investors who took shelter in these funds have discovered why asset allocation is a potent antidote to the market’s vagaries. The category has posted a gain of nearly 16%, even as flexi-cap funds have fetched 3%. Only gold, silver and international funds have done better. The premise is simple: Outperforming asset classes appear evident only in hindsight. If you allocate across multiple uncorrelated asset classes, losses in a few struggling assets are likely to be tempered by gains in others in a stronger position. This time, gold and silver have given multi-asset funds an edge.

    Gold surged 74.5% this year, while silver soared 138% (based on December 19 closing values), even as broader equity indices either shrank or delivered flat to single-digit returns. “Multi-asset funds have hogged the limelight due to their allocation to precious metals,” observes Vivek Banka, Founder, GoalTeller. “In a year when gold and silver delivered massive returns, this ‘one fund, multiple engines’ structure appears to have held investor interest—particularly among long-term investors seeking diversification without managing multiple funds,” says Atul Shinghal, Founder and CEO, Scripbox. These may not offer chart-topping returns, but asset allocation makes portfolios more resilient over the long run.

    Multi-asset funds provided buffer to market weakness