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Why Radhika Gupta is India’s biggest SIF bull
Specialised Investment Funds (SIFs) are designed to sit between mutual funds and portfolio management services, and Gupta, whose firm is currently the largest SIF manager in India, believes they solve a problem that no other product currently addresses well.
Her framework is simple. Every financial product succeeds only if it meets a genuine need. SIFs, she argues, deliver on three fronts: lower dependence on market beta, higher potential for alpha, and superior tax efficiency, a structure deliberately enabled by SEBI.
The real-world proof is in Edelweiss’s own launch. Their first SIF under the Altiva brand, designed to generate 9–10% pre-tax returns with capital gains efficiency over an 18 to 24-month horizon, is on track to become the fastest fund in the firm’s history to hit ₹5,000 crore in AUM.
“If you meet a need correctly, there is demand for it,” Gupta said. She added that she personally invested in the SIF for her own portfolio when she needed a two-year, low-equity-risk allocation, the strongest possible endorsement from a fund house CEO.
India’s economic case remains intact
On the broader economy, Gupta is measured but constructive. India is a 6–8% real growth economy, translating to 10–12% nominal growth, still among the fastest-growing major economies globally, even accounting for geopolitical headwinds, oil price volatility, and tariff-related uncertainty.
Her long-term bull case rests on four pillars: favourable demographics, continued economic reforms, deepening financialisation of household savings, and Indian entrepreneurship. She cited research showing that replacing American CEOs of S&P 500 companies with Indian CEOs would statistically generate alpha, a proxy for the quality of Indian management talent globally.
The 3 sectors to watch over the next decade
Gupta named three structural themes she believes will drive wealth creation in India through the 2030s.
Financialisation of savings: India’s asset management, wealth management, and capital markets ecosystem is still in its early stages. Mutual fund penetration remains low relative to GDP, and the runway for growth is significant.
Defence and energy: India’s defence indigenisation push and rising power consumption are long-duration structural trends with decades of investment ahead.
Premium and discretionary consumption: India has just 0.2 hotel rooms per thousand people against 15 in the US. Hospital beds stand at 0.4–0.5 per thousand, compared to 3–5 in developed markets. The gap between India’s aspiration and its infrastructure in tourism, healthcare, and experiential spending is enormous, and closing it will generate substantial wealth for investors positioned early.
A ₹600 crore revenue event from a single Coldplay concert in Ahmedabad, she noted, is a signal of where young India is heading.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/expert-view/radhika-gupta-reveals-indias-next-3-wealth-creation-themes-why-sifs-are-the-investment-product-of-the-decade/articleshow/131586867.cms




