Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Sunday, Nov 06, 2005

Investment World
Features
Stocks
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Investment World - Mutual Funds
Markets - Mutual Funds


Morgan Stanley Growth Fund: Invest

Suresh Krishnamurthy

INVESTMENTS can be considered in Morgan Stanley Growth Fund, a close-ended fund that can be bought only in the stock market. The fund is trading at a discount of close to 18 per cent to its net asset value.

This discount is at the lower end of the range at which this scheme has traded over the years. While it has been profitable to buy the units when the discount is about 27 per cent and to sell it when the discount has narrowed to about 18 per cent, it is quite likely that this discount may not widen at all, henceforth.

The fund is drifting ever closer to its redemption, scheduled for February 2009, now only 39 months away. As the D-day approaches, the discount will narrow even further. Morgan Stanley Growth Fund also registered a slight improvement over the previous years. This improves the possibility of excess returns for investors in the secondary market. This should also lead to a narrowing of the discount at which the units trade.

Performance: Over the years, the scheme has had the uncanny knack of tracking the BSE-100 index. Even as other mutual funds would take advantage of a roaring bull run and out perform the BSE-100 by a wide margin, this fund would stay just ahead of the BSE-100. This was despite the fund managers making some striking calls each year about what themes would work in the market.

If it had been an open-ended fund, such performance would generally not have been considered investment-worthy. That this close-end fund traded at a discount to its NAV and is also managing to perform as well as the broad market made it investment worthy.

In 2005, however, fund performance has improved. Its performance is now comparable to that of many other large-cap funds. For instance, over the past 12 months, this fund has out performed schemes such as Franklin India Bluechip, Templeton India Growth and Sundaram Growth.

Portfolio: The size of the portfolio is now at about Rs 2,000 crore and has always been one of the largest equity funds in India. This size has proved to be a disadvantage in the past, pulling down returns.

Now, this size is not such a disadvantage as the market capitalisation and liquidity of Indian stocks has risen to substantially higher levels.

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Tata Safari Dicor

Stories in this Section
Riding the wealth generation theme


The storyline
Public offers and sustaining the rally
A peek into a trader's diary
Life is a gift, given in trust
Deutsche Alpha Equity: Sell
Morgan Stanley Growth Fund: Invest
Dabur India: Buy
Gateway Distriparks: Hold
Balrampur Chini Mills: Hold
Arvind Mills: Hold
India Cements: Hold
KEC International: Buy
Manugraph India: Buy
Focus of the week
Nature of recovery is a question mark
Query Corner
Reliance perched above crucial trigger
Skoda accelerates with quick launches
Question 'N' Auto
Porsche drives in the Carrera
Maruti's Mega Celebration
SBI's festival offer
Market buzz
SBI Life Dhana Vriddhi
Of stocks and opportunity cost
Undertone in Nifty turns positive
Options guide
Jindal Steel and Power: Invest for one-year scheme
Safeguards in a takeover
mChq transforms your mobile
`Services add flavour to your portfolio' — Mr Nilesh Shah, CIO, Prudential ICICI MF
MBA degree at your cost
Is medical expense tax exempt?
Make your life count for what really counts


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2005, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line