Discover DSP Multi Asset FoF, a tax-efficient investment fund targeting top equity schemes through strategic asset allocation and expert insights.
DSP Multi Asset FoF to invest in best equity schemes across industry
DSP Mutual Fund will launch one of its kind DSP Multi Asset Omni Fund of Funds, that invests in best performing equity schemes across the industry, besides debt and commodity (gold and silver).
The fund is powered by DSP Netra, the fund house’s in-house market intelligence framework. DSP Netra uses market data, valuations and long-term historical patterns to assess risk and margin of safety across asset classes, helping guide allocation decisions as market conditions evolve.
The fund helps investors in asset allocation and invests in top performing equity schemes in the most tax efficient manner. Investors usually rejig their portfolio to chase the best performing equity schemes but in that process had to incur capital gain tax once they exist the schemes.
DSP Multi Asset FoF, which will invest up to 75 per cent of its portfolio in equity, will track the best performing fund manager across the industry and invest in those schemes to deliver best return to investors.
It will use the stock picking ability of the best equity fund managers in the industry along with asset allocation strategies of DSP Netra.
Besides equity, the fund will invest 15–50 per cent in debt schemes and 10–50 per cent in gold and silver ETFs, with allocations adjusted based on prevailing market conditions.
Sahil Kapoor, Head of Product and Market Strategist, DSP Mutual Fund said investor outcomes often suffer when decisions are driven by narratives or short-term forecasts. DSP Netra was built to rely on data and market history to assess risk and margin of safety across asset classes. This Netra-powered approach comes together in the DSP Multi Asset Omni Fund of Funds, guiding allocation decisions in a systematic manner rather than reacting to market noise, he said.
On the current US tariff cut, he said the average US tariff was 12 per cent before it was increased to 25 per cent and further to 50 per cent and now it has been reduced to 18 per cent.
After the euphoria dies down, the markets will start focusing on corporate earnings growth in December quarter as the impact of US tariff cut is limited and subject to few sectors, he said.
Published on February 3, 2026