&format=webp&quality=medium)
Small-cap mutual funds delivered a sharp rebound in April, with returns surging as much as 20 per cent, sparking fresh debate among investors on whether to stay invested or take profits off the table.
The surge follows a volatile period where the small-cap stocks were under pressure and witnessed corrections. Nevertheless, due to a variety of factors such as steady inflows, better sentiment, attractive valuations, and a revaluation from past highs, the momentum has been revived in the sector.
Speaking on a Zee Business discussion, Hrishikesh Palve, Director at Anand Rathi Wealth, attributed the rally to a mix of structural and cyclical factors.
He highlighted four key drivers behind the recent surge:
1) Consistent investor inflows and improving sentiment
Palve noted that small-cap funds have seen sustained participation. Between January and April, there were only a few days of negative net flows, reflecting growing investor confidence. Monthly inflows also remained strong—around Rs 3,800 crore in February, Rs 6,300 crore in March, and Rs 5,800 crore in April.
He also added that over this period, broader market participation remained strong, supported by consistent SIP flows, even when volatility persisted.
2) Strong domestic institutional support
There was considerable support from Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs), who invested around Rs. 1.46 lakh crore while there was redemptions by Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) to the tune of Rs. 1.12 lakh crore.
This differential between domestic purchases and foreign withdrawals helped sustain the mid- and small-cap markets.
3) Stability through SIP
The Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) continue to provide solid structural support, with their monthly inflows expected to be somewhere in the range of Rs 28,000 - Rs 32,000 crore, providing continuous liquidity into the equities market.
This SIP discipline also helped investors accumulate units during market corrections, improving overall portfolio outcomes for long-term participants.
4) Attractive valuations and earnings recovery
Palve pointed out that small-cap valuations had corrected meaningfully earlier, with the sector trading closer to long-term averages after a significant PE compression from earlier elevated levels. This made them attractive again.
He also added that earnings growth expectations remain strong, with estimates suggesting around 40 per cent+ growth in some quarters, supporting the recovery narrative.
Kshitiz Mahajan, CEO of Complete Circle Wealth, explained that small-cap rallies tend to be sharper due to liquidity dynamics.
He said small-cap stocks have relatively low liquidity compared to large caps, meaning even moderate buying pressure can push prices up quickly. Conversely, during sell-offs, declines can also be sharper.
He further highlighted that in April, small caps outperformed broader indices significantly—while Nifty delivered around 7 per cent returns, small-cap indices delivered nearly 17–20 per cent, reflecting this liquidity effect.
Mahajan added that after a correction from recent highs (nearly 25–30 per cent in small-cap indices earlier), and a valuation reset, investors—especially domestic institutions and funds—returned to small caps, triggering a faster rebound.
He also pointed out that IPO market fatigue and a shift of capital back into secondary markets contributed to mutual fund inflows into small and mid-cap categories.
He added that valuations had become attractive, with small-cap indices correcting from elevated levels (PE falling from around 33–34 to nearly 24 levels), which triggered fresh buying interest.
On the key question investors are asking—whether to exit after the rally—both experts leaned strongly toward a long-term approach.
Hrishikesh Palve emphasised that small-cap investing is fundamentally a long-term strategy. He suggested that investors should ideally maintain a 7+ year horizon, noting that small caps can outperform large caps by 1.5–2 per cent annually over time, but come with higher volatility.
He also referenced the 'mean reversion' concept, noting that long-term small-cap returns tend to gravitate toward historical averages of around 14–15 per cent. He added that recent returns reflect a cyclical recovery phase rather than an abnormal spike.
He further explained that over very short periods, returns may deviate sharply (even turning slightly negative in recent years), but tend to normalise over longer cycles.
Kshitiz Mahajan echoed a similar view, advising against reacting to short-term moves. He recommended maintaining disciplined allocation—typically:
He also advised SIP and STP-based investing rather than lump-sum timing, especially in volatile segments like small caps. He suggested staggered investing through STPs over 12–14 instalments for better risk management.
Experts broadly agree on three key points:
Mahajan added that even if investors missed part of the rally, small-cap opportunities remain intact as many companies in this space are potential future mid-cap or large-cap leaders.
He also emphasised that disciplined SIP investors benefited from accumulating units during earlier corrections, which is now reflecting in portfolio gains.
The April rally in small-cap funds has revived optimism, but experts caution against treating it as a short-term trading opportunity. Instead, they see it as part of a longer cyclical recovery supported by valuations, liquidity, strong domestic flows, and earnings growth expectations.
As Palve summed it up, small caps remain a “high-return but high-volatility” segment best suited for disciplined, long-term investors rather than short-term profit booking strategies.
(Disclaimer: This is not investment advice. Do your own due diligence or consult an expert for financial planning.)