Once scoffed at, passive investing catches on with Indian investors

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
By Koel GhoshA few years ago, on highlighting the benefits of passive investing or index investing, there was scepticism on its ability to
get a foothold in Indian financial markets
How the tides have turned! Now, not only do we have the sceptics accepting its value, but also propagating the concept
Undoubtedly, India is still largely an active market within the scope of generating alpha on average market returns
However, market trends and statistics are now creating awareness of this alternative investment strategy. To better understand passive or
index-based investing, one must first understand what an index is
An index is a basket of securities designed to represent a concept, asset class, geography, or strategy
Indices are designed with clear rules that are defined in a transparent methodology that forms the guidelines for the stocks that enter or
exit the index during periodic reviews. These periodic reviews are known as rebalancing and are critical for the index to remain relevant
during changing market conditions
For example, if the index methodology has a rule that states only companies with consistent quarterly profits can be part of the index, and
index and the next company in line that qualifies will enter the index. A transparent methodology ensures there is no bias in the selection
of stocks and that the index follows the design it was created for
Independent index providers add further neutrality to the index creation process. Additional benefits of the passive style are: Access to a
diversified basket, thereby avoiding concentration risk;Rather than a single stock, single sector, or single asset class focus to a broader
choice of a basket of stocks via an index; andLower costs, as index-based investing does away with the additional costs of active research
trading, management charges and the like.In India, some of the headline indices are the SP BSE Sensex, SP BSE100 and SP BSE500
Statistics have revealed that in certain segments such as largecaps, active strategies have been underperforming benchmark indices
This means that the indices are providing higher returns compared with certain largecap active funds. As of December 31, 2018, the amount of
assets in exchange-traded funds in India was valued at approximately Rs 11,236 crores, a 44 per cent year-on-year growth, which was lower
than the 115 per cent and 126 per cent growth rates seen in 2016 and 2017, respectively. While the debate of active versus passive investing
is ongoing, the belief that both styles can be encompassed to achieve various investment objectives is changing the horizon in Indian
financial markets
Passive investing is not only here to stay but to grow. (Koel Ghosh is Head of Business at SP Dow Jones Indices
Views are her own)