Friday, 30 January 2026

Why Food Matters Less in India’s New CPI and What It Means for RBI

Why Food Matters Less in India’s New CPI and What It Means for RBI 30Jan2026

 

 
 
 

(The views expressed here are for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice. While the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in financial markets, this content is intended to share general insights and does not constitute financial guidance. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)

 

India’s inflation numbers are about to change in a way that has little to do with actual price movements. From Jan2026, India will adopt a new Consumer Price Index with a revised consumption basket.

The new basket may better reflect how households spend today, compared to the 2012 CPI series.

The most consequential shift is a sharp reduction in the weight of food in the inflation index. 

This change follows recommendations of an Expert Group constituted by MoSPI (Indian Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation). 

MoSPI constituted the Expert Group to review and update the CPI basket and methodology. 

The group used the latest household consumption data to update item weights, adopt global classification standards and better capture spending on services and modern consumption patterns. 

The shift will reshape how inflation behaves—and how the Reserve Bank of India, India's central bank, reads it.

 

(article continues below)

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Related blogs:

India CPI Inflation versus WPI Inflation 

Fiscal Deficit and Its Indirect Monetisation by Reserve Bank of India  

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2. Why Change the CPI Consumption Basket:

The Need for Changing the CPI Basket: Over the past decade, household spending patterns in India have shifted significantly, especially after COVID-19, with more expenditure on services, housing, transport and digital consumption. 

The old 2012 CPI basket no longer reflected these changes, leading to a gap between measured inflation and actual cost of living. 

Updating the basket is essential to ensure that the CPI remains a reliable guide for policy, wages and social benefits.

The Expert Group revised the CPI basket by reducing the weights of some items and increasing others, based on the latest household consumption data and international standards. 

However, the report does not explicitly explain why specific items were added, removed or regrouped.

Possible reasons for introducing changes in the CPI consumption basket include:

> shifts in household spending patterns, as reflected in household surveys

> rising importance of services in consumer spending, 

> adoption of Classification of Individual Consumption According to Purpose (COICOP 2018), and

> the need for a CPI that reflects modern consumption rather than historical weights.

 

The CPI 2024 basket adopts COICOP 2018, the international standard for classifying household consumption, to improve global comparability and consistency in reporting.

Household consumption has shifted, especially after COVID-19 outbreak, away from food toward housing, transport, leisure, health and other services. 

The new CPI weights are based on the latest 2023–24 household consumption expenditure survey (HCES), ensuring the index closely resembles current spending patterns and present cost of living. 

Adopting global standards and revised data helps make the CPI more accurate, credible and comparable internationally.

 

3. The New CPI 2024 Basket: Key Changes:

Having looked at why the CPI basket is being revised, it’s important to see how the weights themselves are shifting in the new 2024 series. 

The CPI 2024 basket shows some significant changes compared to the 2012 series (see chart below).

The biggest reductions are in Food and Beverages, which falls by 9.11 percentage points to 36.75 per cent from 45.86 per cent, and Fuel and Light, which declines by 1.48 points to 5.36 per cent from 6.84 per cent. 

The biggest drop in food weight—9.11 percentage points—reflects shifts in household spending pattern, as captured in the latest 2023–24 expenditure survey. Actually, the food weight drop amounts to nearly one-fifth reduction from its earlier share in the CPI basket. 

This is a substantial structural shift and will materially change how headline inflation responds to food price movements. 

The lower food weight also reflects greater diversification in diets and a declining share of staples in household budgets.

The weight of Fuel and Light was reduced by 1.48 percentage points because households now spend proportionately less on energy and fuels compared to other items.

These drops can be seen as households allocating a smaller share of their budgets to staples like food and energy, though it’s not clear how closely the revised CPI will ultimately reflect actual household spending patterns.

Meanwhile, several categories gain prominence. Transport and Communication rises by 3.82 percentage points to 12.41 per cent (8.59 per cent), reflecting higher household spending on mobility, communication and digital services. 

A new category, Restaurants and Accommodation, is introduced with a 3.35 per cent weight, capturing dining out and short-term lodging expenses.

Housing also increases by 2.23 points to 12.30 per cent (10.07 per cent), reflecting higher spending on rent and related costs, while Personal Care and Effects rises by 1.15 points to 5.04 per cent (3.89 per cent), accounting for growing expenditure on grooming, cosmetics and personal goods.

These shifts highlight a broader trend

India’s consumption is moving away from staples toward services, housing and lifestyle-related spending. 

It looks like the new CPI basket captures this evolution, giving a more accurate picture of modern household expenditure and its impact on inflation measurement.

Top five items in new CPI 2024:

36.75%    Food and Beverages
12.41%     Transport and communication
12.30%    Housing
  6.10%    Health
  5.53%    Clothing  

73.09%    total of five items

Looking at the CPI 2024 basket as a whole, just five categories make up over 73 per cent of total household spending.

This concentration shows that while staples like food still dominate, services, housing and health are increasingly important in measuring India’s cost of living.

As an aside, the CPI revision was long overdue, coming after a 12-year gap. This delay has directly impacted savers and workers, whose Dearness Allowance is linked to the CPI for industrial workers. 

Using the old basket meant DA increases were smaller than they should have been, since it no longer reflected current household spending patterns. The new CPI should provide a more accurate basis for compensation adjustments.

In fact, yours truly has been calling for a CPI revision since 2021, highlighting the need for an updated basket that reflects current household spending patterns (see tweet). 
    

Chart: CPI Weights: 2024 Series versus 2012 Series (All India Combined) and Changes > 


 
Bonus Tip: MoSPI’s official CPI weights are precise to 16 decimal places — more exact than most of us need for grocery shopping! ðŸ˜€
 
 
4. Key Recommendations of the Expert Group

Use the latest Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (2023–24) to determine item weights in the CPI 2024 basket.

Set the base year as 2024, with prices collected from January to December 2024. The index will be set at 100 for this period.

Adopt COICOP 2018 classification for better international comparability.

Introduce new categories like Restaurants & Accommodation and increase weights for services, transport, communication and personal care to reflect modern consumption patterns.

Better methodology

Online prices will be collected from 12 major towns — Bombay, Delhi, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Madras, Calcutta, Surat, Pune, Jaipur, Lucknow and Kanpur — each with over 25 lakh people, to better capture trends in e-commerce spending. 

To better capture online shopping trends, price data will be collected from online / e-commerce markets, such as, Amazon India, Flipkart, Blinkit and BigBasket. 

In earlier 2012 series, there was no such collection from online markets.

The CPI 2024 will collect price data from 1,465 rural markets (up from 1,181) and 1,395 urban markets (up from 1,114) across 434 towns (earlier 310). 

The number of items in the CPI basket has also increased to 358, compared to 299 in the 2012 series, expanding coverage to better capture household spending and emerging consumption trends.

Timeline for New Series:

As per MoSPI, Timeline for New Series is as follows:

The new series of CPI (base year 2024) to be released on 12Feb2026.

The new series of GDP (base year 2022-23) will be released on 27Feb2026.

The new series of IIP (base year 2022-23) is slated for release on 28May2026. 

 

5. How RBI Will See the New CPI Series

Low impact of food inflation:

The lower food weight—from 45.86 per cent in the 2012 series to 36.75 per cent in CPI 2024—will significantly affect how headline inflation is interpreted. 

With food accounting for a smaller share, sharp rises in vegetable, cereal or other staple prices will have a dampened impact on overall CPI inflation. 

This might make the new CPI appear more stable than the old one during periods of volatile food prices.

At the same time, higher weights for housing, transport, communication, services and personal care mean that trends in these areas will carry more influence in the inflation gauge. 

For the RBI, this could shift the focus toward broader price pressures rather than purely food-driven spikes.

In short, while food inflation will still matter, the new CPI series may moderate headline swings and could influence the timing and intensity of monetary policy responses. 

Policymakers will need to look carefully at component-level inflation to understand the real pressures on households. 

Upcoming RBI Review of MPF / FIT:

The Reserve Bank of India is, by mandate, scheduled to review its Monetary Policy Framework (MPF) in Mar2026, and with the new CPI in place, the RBI may have greater clarity on inflation trends and underlying price pressures [see tweet].

As part of its flexible inflation targeting (FIT) mandate, the RBI will likely continue to aim for its 4 percent inflation target, with a tolerance band of 2–6 percent, in the upcoming March 2026 review. 

The central bank may operate with greater confidence now that the new CPI better reflects modern consumption habits, including online shopping.

6. Closing thoughts

India’s CPI is getting a long-overdue update after 12 years, with the new 2024 basket promising to account for modern consumption patterns. Food and fuel weights have been cut, while housing, transport, communication services and personal care now carry more influence. 

A new item of consumption, namely, Restaurants and Accommodation, has been added to the revised CPI basket.

Online shopping and a wider coverage of items and markets make the index more representative of today’s households. For the RBI, this means headline inflation may appear more stable, even when food prices are volatile, giving policymakers greater clarity in managing monetary policy. 

At the same time, the revised CPI provides a fairer basis for workers’ Dearness Allowance and social benefits, aligning official inflation measures more closely with how Indians actually spend.

 

(Thanks for your patience, I could only complete the blog post by 10 PM!)

 

 - - -


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References and additional data:

India New CPI 2024 Series - Expert Group on Comprehensive CPI Revision

PIB press release 28Jan2026 new base year for CPI, GDP and IIP 

 

Tweet thread 17Dec2025  India New GDP series - new base year for GDP FY 2022-23 - ACNAS - timeline for GDP releases - GDP revision - Revised GDP - GDP back series 

Tweet thread 17Dec2025  India New CPI series - CPI base year - CPI basket revision - Revised CPI - GDP / CPI data quality - CPI new base year 2024 - data collection from e-commerce websites

Tweet thread 25Aug2025 Ecommerce, quick commerce and inflation control / MOSPI scrapping ecommece prices for CPI data - CPI basket revisions - CPI basket weights - CPI revision - ISP index of services production

 
Tweet thread 25Aug2025 RBI review of Monetary Policy Framework (MPF) - background to MPF - Urjit Patel panel on MPF - FIT or flexible inflatin targeting - CPI basket rvisions - CPI basket weights - CPI revision -
 
Tweet thread 25Aug2025 CPI inflation - CPI basket rvisions - CPI basket weights - CPI revision - food CPI - CPI basket changed post-COVID-19 - inflation underestimation - 

 

Screen shots from PDF of Expert Group Report On CPI Revision >

 




 

------------------------ 

Read more:

Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Weblinks and Investing
 
India Fixed Income Data Bank
 
Indian Economy Data Bank 

India Forex Data Bank 
 
Who is Eating my Gold ETF Return? (gold data / gold ETF data)
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets 28Feb2025  
 
Corporate Groups and Listed Companies 29Dec2024
 
Corporate Governance Concerns - Indian Companies 13Dec2024
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 16Feb2024  
 
various uploads on Scribd by VRK100  
 
 
Top 10 Equity Indices Powering Passive Investing in India: Big-Picture View  
 
Canada's Mark Carney at Davos: Middle Powers Must Step Up 28Jan2026
 
Nifty IT Underperformance Explained – Nasdaq Outshines Indian IT in 2025  26Jan2026
 
Inside the BSE 500 and S&P 500: Top Stocks, Top Sectors, Big Risks 31Dec2025  
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets Dec2025 
 
RBI's New Comfort with Foreign Capital Spurs FDI Turnaround in India's Financial Sector 17Jan2026 
 
The Next Generation of Market Leaders: A Fresh Look at Nifty Next 50's Corporate Landscape 15Jan2026
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2025 
 
NSE Emerging Indices Fundamentals Comparison 31Dec2025 (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices) 
  
NSE Indices Calendar Year Returns 2006 to 2025  07Jan2026  
 
FPIs Said Goodbye, Retail Kept Mum, DIIs Stayed Strong: India’s 2025 Market Story 02Jan2026 
 
BSE 500 versus Nifty 500: Same Market, Different Indices 02Jan2026 
 
Central Banks Fuel Gold Speculation: Risking Pain for Ordinary People 23Dec2025
 
-------------------
 
Disclosure:  I've got a vested interest in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.
 
Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets.

------------------------ 

CFA 10 Year Milestone Professional Learning Program 2025 Certificate of Achievement 



 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA New Badge 

CFA Badge  

 

Viewing Options for this blog in different formats:

Sidebar and so on

 

He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100 

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Top 10 Equity Indices Powering Passive Investing in India: Big-Picture View

Top 10 Equity Indices Powering Passive Investing in India: Big-Picture View 29Jan2026

 

 
 
 

(The views expressed here are for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice. While the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in financial markets, this content is intended to share general insights and does not constitute financial guidance. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)

 

 

In an earlier blog, we looked at how passive equity investing in India was shaping up using data as of 30June2025.

Since then, the passive space has continued to grow, with fresh flows and market movements altering the passive landscape.

This blog updates that analysis using the latest available data as of 31Dec2025.

By ranking the top equity indices by passive AUM, it takes a big-picture view of where investor money is actually concentrated.

 

(article continues below)

---------------

Related blogs:

Check Update 11Jan2026 with Charts 98 and 99 of the blog for Total Assets of India MF Industry (13-year data)

Check Update 19Nov2025 with Chart 88 of the blog for passive fund net inflows

Check Update 19Nov2025 with Chart 87 of the blog for passive equity fund assets growth

Passive Titans of India: The Top 10 Equity Indices by Fund Size 17Jul2025 

India Flagship Equity ETFs with Low Fees and Fair Trading Volumes 12Jun2025  (passive funds)

Low Expense Ratios, High Returns: Why Passive Equity Funds Matter 06Jun2025 (passive funds)

---------------

 

1. The Big Picture

India’s mutual fund industry has seen tremendous growth in the past five years. 

As of 31Dec2025, the total size of mutual fund industry is Rs 80.23 lakh crore -- it had grown by 2.6 times in the past five years, from a level of Rs 31 lakh crore as on 31Dec2020.  

 

The snapshot of total assets under management or AUM is as follows (31Dec2025): See chart 1 below for details:

The AUM of active equity segment is Rs 35.73 lakh crore and that of passive equity (both exchange traded funds or ETFs as well as index funds) is Rs 10.07 lakh crore, totaling Rs 45.80 lakh crore.

The share of all equity in total mutual fund industry AUM is 57.1 per cent -- the share has grown from a level of 41.1 per cent as of 31Mar2019.

Remarkably, the share of passive equity funds in total equity assets is nearly 22 per cent.   

Of the total passive equity segment, equity ETF assets are Rs 7.99 lakh crore dominating with 79 per cent of total passive; while equity index funds asset size is Rs 2.08 lakh crore with 21 per cent share.  

It may be noted the total equity assets do not include equity portion of Hybrid schemes. The break-up of debt, equity and other segments of Hybrid category is not made available by AMFI or Association of Mutual Funds of India, the industry body. 

Hybrid schemes consist of schemes that invest in a blend of asset classes across the spectrum -- like, debt, equity, gold and silver. 

The total number of passive equity funds are 468 as at the end of Dec2025.  There are a total of 122 unique equity benchmark indices upon which passive equity funds, both ETFs as well as index funds, are based. 

 

Chart 1: Big picture - India passive equity mutual funds and their asset size as of 31Dec2025:

 

 
 
2. India Top 10 Passive Equity Indices and Assets Size 
 
A peculiar feature of India's passive landscape is the heavy skew towards a few benchmark equity indices.  The passive fund size is heavily skewed toward the top 10 passive indices controlling nearly 90 per cent, or Rs 9.06 lakh crore, of total passive AUM. 
 
The total passive equity AUM, as stated above, stands at Rs 10.07 lakh crore, based on the author’s analysis of raw data sourced from Rupee Vest
 
The asset concentration is so massive, the top two equity indices account for 74 per cent of total passive AUM.  
 
This is mainly due to massive EPFO investments (see update 19Jun2025 with charts 51 to 55) in Nifty 50, Sensex, CPSE and Bharat 22 ETFs. 
 
Chart 2: India Top 10 Passive Equity Indices by Fund Size: 
 
(please click on the image to view better) 
 

 
 
Key Observations from Chart 2 above:
 
1. Dominance of Nifty 50 Index:

AUM: Rs 4.97 lakh crore (49.4% of total passive AUM).

Total number of passive funds: 44
 
ETF vs Index Fund split:

ETFs: Rs 4.03 lakh crore (81%)

Index funds: Rs 0.95 lakh crore (19%)

Conclusion: This index dominates India's passive investing space and is the clear market leader in both ETF and index fund formats.

2. BSE Sensex:

AUM: Rs 2.47 lakh crore (24.5% of total passive)

Total number of passive funds: 23
 
Heavily ETF-focused (94.6% of AUM in ETFs).

Shows investor preference for ETFs in flagship indices, Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex.

3. Concentration in Two Indices

Nifty 50 and Sensex together account for Rs 7.44 lakh crore, which is 73.9 per cent of the total passive equity AUM. The rest eight indices make up only 16.1 per cent of the total.
 
4. Break-up of Passive Equity Assets by Fund Type:
 
Of the top 10 equity indices AUM of Rs 9.06 lakh crore, AUM of equity ETFs is Rs 7.46 lakh crore (number of ETFs 80), while that of index funds is Rs 1.61 lakh crore (89).
 
 
3. Break-up of Passive by NSE / BSE / Foreign Indices
 
Who’s Running the Show: NSE vs BSE vs Foreign Indices:

a). NSE / Nifty indices collectively account for Rs 7.20 lakh crore (71.5 per cent of total) of passive equity AUM.

b). BSE indices oversee around Rs 2.68 lakh crore (26.6 per cent).

c). Foreign indices—like Nasdaq‑100—make up just Rs 19,000 crore (just 1.9 per ent) of the mix. 
 
Despite the availability of international passive equity options, foreign indices represent just about 1.9 per cent of total passive equity AUM in India—making international investing far from mainstream. 
 
Check the earlier blog for factors contributing to the low participation.  
 
Chart 3: Break-up of passive equity indices by NSE / BSE / Foreign Indices:
 

 
4. India Top 10 Passive Equity Funds by Assets:
 
As has been highlighted by the author repeatedly over the years, India's passive landscape is heavily tilted: the top 10 passive equity fund schemes  command two-thirds of all passive equity assets under management. 
 
As highlighted in Section 2 above, their dominance is not random but heavily driven by large EPFO investments in just four ETFs tracking Nifty 50, Sensex, CPSE and Bharat 22. 
 
EPFO’s equity exposure is restricted to ETFs tracking these four indices, and is routed through just four fund houses: SBI, UTI, Nippon India, and ICICI Prudential.
 
Out of the total ten, five passive funds based on Nifty 50 have assets of Rs  4.09 lakh crore (61 per cent of total), four funds based on Sensex have assets worth Rs 2.32 lakh crore (35 per cent) and one CPSE ETF accounts for Rs 0.29 lakh crore (4 per cent) of assets.
 
Of these top ten funds, nine are ETFs holding around 96 per cent of the total AUM, while just one index fund makes up the remaining 4 per cent. 
 
 
Table 4: India Top 10 passive equity funds by assets: 
 
 
Data excluded from index-wise analysis:

Indices with combined passive equity AUM of less than Rs 2,000 crore have been excluded from the index-wise ranking and grouped under “funds not included above.” (see chart 5 given as "additional data" at the end of the blog)

These excluded indices together account for about 3.7 per cent (Rs 37,400 crore) of total passive equity AUM -- spread across 208 passive funds -- indicating a long tail of very small and thinly tracked benchmarks.

Of this, ETFs account for 112 funds with a combined AUM of roughly Rs 18,535 crore. Index funds make up the remaining 96 funds, managing about Rs 18,864 crore.

Most of these indices have limited investor participation and are often represented by just one or two funds. Their small asset size suggests either niche investor appeal or products that are still in an early stage of adoption.

Excluding them helps keep the analysis focused on indices that meaningfully influence the overall passive equity landscape.
 

5. Investment Implications:
 
From an investment perspective, the data points to a few clear implications for novice investors.

First, passive equity investing in India is still best suited for core portfolio exposure through a small set of large, liquid indices, especially the Nifty 50 and Sensex, which dominate both assets and liquidity. These indices offer scale, low tracking error and cost efficiency that smaller indices struggle to match.

Second, the sharp gap between the number of funds and the concentration of AUM suggests that many passive products exist without meaningful investor adoption. 
 
Investors should therefore focus less on product variety and more on liquidity, tracking error and expense ratios, particularly when choosing between multiple funds tracking the same index.

Third, midcap, sectoral and factor-based indices remain satellite allocations rather than core holdings. Their relatively small AUM and fragmented flows indicate higher volatility and execution risk, making them suitable only for sophisticated investors.

Fourth, the dominance of ETFs in the largest indices highlights their role as the preferred vehicle for institutional and long-term allocations. 
 
Retail investors, however, may still find index funds more practical where ETF liquidity or market access is a concern.

Finally, the data reinforces that passive investing in India is evolving gradually rather than explosively diversifying. For most investors, a simple, low-cost exposure to one or two broad-market indices remains the most efficient way to participate in equity markets.

This isn’t investment advice. Even though the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in the financial markets, this is just general insight—not a recommendation.  

 

 - - -


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References and additional data:

AMFI Monthly Data 

Nifty Passive Insights - Quarterly

NSE Passive Funds - dedicated website for passive funds 

Rupee Vest MF screener

NSE Index Dashboard - Dec2025 PDF (to compare risk / return data of Nifty Indices)

Chart 5. India Passive Equity Funds and Their Asset Size: A Brief Analysis >
 

 
 
 
-------------------
 
Related Blogs on Mutual Funds (for a comprehensive list of all articles on Mutual Funds, look for section "4 Mutual Funds" in my blog Blog of Blogs Theme-wise): 
 

Check Update 11Jan2026 with Charts 98 and 99 of the blog for Total Assets of India MF Industry (13-year data)

Check Update 19Nov2025 with Chart 88 of the blog for passive fund net inflows

Check Update 19Nov2025 with Chart 87 of the blog for passive equity fund assets growth

Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2025 (Fund categories with similar returns)
 
NSE's Backtesting Claims Child Indices Beat Parent Indices - But Does It Hold in Real World? 09Dec2025 (incl calendar year returns of Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150 and the so-called smart beta indices) (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices)
 
Factor Investing in India: Do "Smart Beta" Indices Outsmart Nifty 50 and Midcap 150? 24Nov2025 (incl trailing returns; calendar year returns of Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150 and the so-called smart beta indices) (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices)
India Flagship ETFs with Low Fees and Fair Trading Volumes 12Jun2025
 
Passive Titans of India: The Top 10 Equity Indices by Fund Size 17Jul2025  (Big picture view of Passive Equity Funds - passive funds)  
 
India Flagship Equity ETFs with Low Fees and Fair Trading Volumes 12Jun2025  (passive funds)
 
Low Expense Ratios, High Returns: Why Passive Equity Funds Matter 06Jun2025 (passive funds)
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 02Jun2025 (Fund categories with similar returns)
 
Arbitrage Funds and Avenues 24Jul2024
 
Rapid Growth is Assets of India's MF Industry 18Jul2024

Mutual Fund Categories with Similar Returns 17Jul2024
 
Side Pocketing Episode of Aditya Birla SL Dynamic Bond Fund 17Jul2024
 
Crux of Kotak Debt Hybrid Fund 15Jul2024

India Fixed Income Data Bank 02Jul2024

The Little Secret Behind Nifty Next 50 Index's Recent Success 13May2024

NSE Indices Calendar Year Returns: 2006 to 2024   05May2024
 
How to Buy Nifty Midcap Index 03May2024 
 
NSE Emerging Indices Comparison 31Mar2024 
 
India Passive Funds and Their Asset Size 29Apr2024 (Big Picture View of Passive Equity Funds) 
 
Guide to Tracking Error of Mutual Funds 27Apr2024 
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Mar2024 
 
Gilt Funds Worth Considering! 14Apr2024
 
Select Gilt Funds Performance 05Mar2024
 
Equity ETFs and Equity Index Funds Compared 05Feb2024
 
Indian Equity ETFs Worth Considering
 
Analysis of Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 Index
 
Quarterly Data of MF Assets 31Mar2023
 
Understanding Corporate Debt Market Development Fund (CDMDF) 

Negative Impact of Debt Mutual Fund Tax Changes 
 
EPFO Investments in Stocks Via ETFs 
 
NSE Indices (Nifty 50, Nifty Next 50, Nifty 100 and Nifty 500) Comparison 31Dec2022

Why Do Indian Equity MFs Always Disappoint Investors?
 
Indian Mutual Funds and the Art of Ripping off Investors
  
Who is Eating My Gold ETF Return?
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Mar2024 (MF categories with similar returns)
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2023 

------------------------ 

Read more:

Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Weblinks and Investing
 
India Fixed Income Data Bank
 
Indian Economy Data Bank 

India Forex Data Bank 
 
Who is Eating my Gold ETF Return? (gold data / gold ETF data)
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets 28Feb2025  
 
Corporate Groups and Listed Companies 29Dec2024
 
Corporate Governance Concerns - Indian Companies 13Dec2024
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 16Feb2024  
 
various uploads on Scribd by VRK100  
 
 
Canada's Mark Carney at Davos: Middle Powers Must Step Up 28Jan2026
 
Nifty IT Underperformance Explained – Nasdaq Outshines Indian IT in 2025  26Jan2026
 
Inside the BSE 500 and S&P 500: Top Stocks, Top Sectors, Big Risks 31Dec2025  
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets Dec2025 
 
RBI's New Comfort with Foreign Capital Spurs FDI Turnaround in India's Financial Sector 17Jan2026 
 
The Next Generation of Market Leaders: A Fresh Look at Nifty Next 50's Corporate Landscape 15Jan2026
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2025 
 
NSE Emerging Indices Fundamentals Comparison 31Dec2025 (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices) 
  
NSE Indices Calendar Year Returns 2006 to 2025  07Jan2026  
 
FPIs Said Goodbye, Retail Kept Mum, DIIs Stayed Strong: India’s 2025 Market Story 02Jan2026 
 
BSE 500 versus Nifty 500: Same Market, Different Indices 02Jan2026 
 
Central Banks Fuel Gold Speculation: Risking Pain for Ordinary People 23Dec2025
 
-------------------
 
Disclosure:  I've got a vested interest in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.
 
Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets.

------------------------ 

CFA 10 Year Milestone Professional Learning Program 2025 Certificate of Achievement 



 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA New Badge 

CFA Badge  

 

Viewing Options for this blog in different formats:

Sidebar and so on

 

He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100