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§01 · INSIGHTS · GLOSSARY · 4 MIN · NOTE

Multi-Cap Fund

Multi-cap funds must invest at least 25% each in large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap stocks as mandated by SEBI's September 2020 circular. The mandatory allocation ensures genuine multi-cap exposure rather than large-cap dominance.

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Contents
  1. How the category is defined
  2. What investors should look at
  3. Worked example
  4. See also
  5. Primary source

Multi-cap funds are a SEBI-mandated equity mutual fund category that must maintain a minimum allocation of 25% each to large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap stocks, with the remaining 25% freely allocated across any market-cap segment. This structure was formalised in SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2020/130 (September 2020), replacing the earlier open-mandate "multi-cap" category that had evolved into de facto large-cap funds.

How the category is defined

Before September 2020, multi-cap funds had no minimum allocations to mid- and small-cap stocks. Empirically, most had drifted to 70–80% large-cap exposure. SEBI's September 2020 circular introduced strict floors: minimum 25% large-cap (rank 1–100), minimum 25% mid-cap (rank 101–250), minimum 25% small-cap (rank 251+), leaving 25% discretionary.

The revised mandate caused significant industry disruption: existing multi-cap funds were required to either comply with the new floors or reclassify. Several AMCs converted their existing multi-cap schemes to Flexi-Cap (a new category created simultaneously by the same 2020 circular) to retain allocation flexibility. Fund houses may operate one multi-cap and one flexi-cap fund as separate products.

The mandatory 25% small-cap floor meaningfully raises the risk profile of multi-cap funds relative to large-cap or flexi-cap funds, since small-cap allocations amplify volatility and liquidity risk.

What investors should look at

  • Effective small-cap exposure: A 25% small-cap floor is a mandatory minimum, not a ceiling. Some multi-cap funds hold 30–40% in small-caps for return enhancement. Review the factsheet's market-cap breakdown monthly.
  • Portfolio turnover: Rebalancing across three market-cap bands — especially after sharp mid/small-cap corrections — generates higher turnover than single-segment funds. Turnover above 100% is common; check the annual report.
  • Benchmark choice: Many multi-cap funds benchmark against Nifty 500 Multicap 50:25:25 TRI (launched post-2020 to mirror the SEBI mandate). Others use Nifty 500 TRI. Ensure like-for-like benchmark comparison.
  • Category vintage: Post-September 2020 multi-cap funds have a shorter live track record under the current mandate. Five-year returns bridging the pre-2020 period reflect the old flexible mandate — weight recent post-2020 data more heavily.

Worked example

As at 31 March 2025, a representative multi-cap fund allocation (source: monthly factsheet — illustrative):

SegmentMandate MinimumActual Allocation
Large-Cap (rank 1–100)25%38%
Mid-Cap (rank 101–250)25%32%
Small-Cap (rank 251+)25%28%
Cash + Debt2%

This fund held above the 25% minimum in each band. The blend produces a risk profile meaningfully different from either a pure large-cap or a pure small-cap fund. Nifty 500 Multicap 50:25:25 TRI returned approximately 22% p.a. over 3 years to March 2025 — a reasonable benchmark for evaluating this category.

See also

Primary source

SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2020/130 (11 September 2020) — Categorisation of Multi Cap Fund: sebi.gov.in. AMFI Bi-Annual Categorisation List: amfiindia.com.

Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme-related documents carefully. ARN-314872. APMI APRN-01658. Content is informational and not investment advice.

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