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Investing · 5 min read

Small Cap vs Large Cap Funds: Which One Belongs in Your Portfolio?

Small caps run hotter, drawdown harder, and behave nothing like large caps. A practical framework for sizing them — and when to skip the segment entirely.

By Jarviix Editorial · Apr 19, 2026

Stacks of coins of different sizes
Photo via Unsplash

The most contentious allocation decision in an Indian equity portfolio is how much to put in small caps. The numbers seduce — small-cap funds beat large caps by 4-6% annualized over the last 15 years. The drawdowns terrify — the same funds lost 60-65% in 2018-2020.

Both are true. Here's how to think about it without getting carried away by either side.

What "small cap" actually means

SEBI defines mutual fund market-cap categories by the rank of a stock on the BSE:

Category Market cap rank
Large cap Top 100 stocks
Mid cap 101-250
Small cap 251 onwards

By rule, a small-cap mutual fund must hold ≥65% of assets in small-cap stocks. The remaining 35% can be invested in mid- or large-caps for tactical reasons.

In absolute terms, small caps in 2026 are companies with market cap roughly between ₹1,000 crore and ₹35,000 crore. That's a wide universe — roughly 4,000 listed names — and it includes both genuinely tiny micro-caps and reasonably mature mid-sized businesses.

The return-and-volatility profile

Long-term annualized returns (rolling 10-year averages, last 20 years):

Index CAGR Worst 1-year Worst peak-to-trough
Nifty 50 ~12.5% -52% (2008) -60% (2008)
Nifty Midcap 150 ~14.5% -57% (2008) -65% (2008)
Nifty Smallcap 250 ~15-16% -67% (2008) -75% (2018-20)

The takeaway is honest: small caps deliver an extra 3-4% over a long horizon, but you pay for it with deeper drawdowns and longer recovery periods.

The 2018-2020 small-cap drawdown took 5 years to recover to the prior peak. If you needed to liquidate in year 3 of that drawdown, the long-term CAGR didn't help you.

When small caps make sense

A meaningful small-cap allocation (15-25% of equity) is reasonable when:

  • Your equity horizon is 15+ years with no liquidity needs in between.
  • You can rebalance mechanically through corrections without panic-selling.
  • The rest of your portfolio is diversified enough that a 60% small-cap drawdown wouldn't derail your goals.
  • You're comfortable with a 3-5 year underperformance period during which large caps lead.

When to keep it small or skip it

Skip or cap small-cap allocation at 5-10% if:

  • Goal is within 5-7 years (kid's education, house down payment, retirement <10 years away).
  • Total portfolio is under ₹10 lakh — you don't yet have an emergency-fund + debt cushion to ride out drawdowns.
  • You've panic-sold during a previous correction.
  • Your overall financial position requires predictability — single income, dependents, no emergency buffer.

Active vs passive in small caps

Unlike large caps (where 70-80% of active funds underperform), small caps are one of the few segments where active management still has a structural edge:

  • The universe is wider and less analyzed
  • Information asymmetry rewards research
  • Liquidity constraints can favor a nimble manager who can move out of a position before it becomes overcrowded
  • Index reconstitution friction hurts passive small-cap funds more than active ones

That said, small-cap funds in India have seen massive AUM inflows since 2020. Many funds that delivered 18-20% historical returns now manage ₹15,000-30,000 crore — a size at which they can no longer build meaningful positions in genuinely small companies. AUM bloat is a real risk to monitor.

Look for small-cap funds where:

  • AUM is under ₹15,000 crore
  • Top 10 holdings are not >40% of portfolio
  • Manager has a 7+ year track record
  • TER is under 0.80% (direct plan)

Sizing it within the broader portfolio

A pragmatic equity sub-allocation:

Risk profile Large cap Mid cap Small cap International
Conservative 70% 15% 5% 10%
Balanced 55% 20% 15% 10%
Aggressive 40% 25% 25% 10%

If you're choosing one fund per category for simplicity, that's it — three equity funds plus an international fund. Adding a fourth or fifth fund in the same category typically adds correlation and tax friction without diversification benefit.

The tax angle that nobody mentions

When a small-cap fund holds a stock that gets reclassified upward (becomes mid-cap), the fund has to sell it. That sale generates capital gains, which are passed on to you indirectly through the NAV. Over time, this rebalancing tax drags 0.5-1.0% of returns annually compared to a pure long-only portfolio with no rebalancing.

Index funds in the small-cap space (Nifty Smallcap 250 Index Fund, e.g.) are slightly more tax-efficient because they only sell on quarterly index revisions — but they're still fully exposed to the index reconstitution drag.

A common mistake: chasing recent winners

The single biggest behavior error in this segment is chasing the small-cap fund that returned 50%+ last year. Mean reversion in small-caps is brutal — the top-quartile fund in one 3-year period frequently lands in the bottom quartile in the next.

Instead, look for:

  • 7-year and 10-year track record (not 1-year)
  • Consistency across multiple cycles (not just the 2020-2024 bull run)
  • Manager continuity — funds change character when star managers leave
  • Style discipline — funds that drift toward mid-caps to chase performance often disappoint

Small caps are powerful when sized right and patient. They're financially traumatic when oversized or panic-sold. Treat them as a satellite, not a core — and your overall portfolio can benefit from their long-term tailwind without being defined by their short-term volatility.

Frequently asked questions

What's the right small-cap allocation for a 30-year-old?

For most 30-year-olds with a 25-30 year horizon, 10-15% of total equity in a small-cap fund is a defensible upper bound. Going to 25-30% is a tactical bet on outperformance that historically pays off but with brutal interim drawdowns (50-60% in some cycles). Anything above that is a concentrated bet, not diversification.

Are small-cap mutual funds safer than picking small-cap stocks directly?

Materially safer. A diversified small-cap fund holds 50-70 names; even if 10 underperform badly, the rest absorb the impact. Picking 5-10 small-caps directly concentrates company-specific risk — fraud, governance, leverage and accounting issues are far more common in this segment, and any single one can cost you 80-100% on that name.

Why do small-cap funds underperform during AMFI rebalancings?

Because SEBI defines large/mid/small caps purely by market cap rank. When index providers reclassify a former small cap into mid cap, every small-cap fund must sell — sometimes at depressed prices. Conversely, large-cap funds get forced buyers. This 'index inclusion drag' is one of the structural costs of investing in the small-cap segment via mutual funds.

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