* Period ending 31st January, 2026, ** Three-year period for PMS and AIF, also five year period for PMS, *** Rolling five-year returns of all the Multicap PMSes reporting to PMS Bazaar, **** For rolling five year periods from inception till date, ***** Five-year Period 

In January 2026, Indian equity markets remained under pressure as risk aversion prevailed, driven largely by sustained foreign investor outflows and global macro uncertainty. Benchmark indices corrected during the month, reflecting continued FII selling amid global portfolio rebalancing and elevated bond yields, while domestic institutional investors provided partial support, helping to limit deeper drawdowns through steady mutual fund and SIP inflows. On the macroeconomic front, India’s annualized inflation remained at 2.75% as the country moved to a revised base year index of 2024. This reinforces expectations of policy stability, while India’s GDP growth outlook remained resilient at approximately 7.4% for FY26, underscoring the strength of underlying economic fundamentals despite near-term market volatility. Overall, January was characterized by cautious sentiment and heightened volatility, as supportive domestic fundamentals were outweighed by global headwinds and foreign flow pressures.

In January 2026, the benchmark S&P BSE 500 TRI fell by 3.34% and NIFTY Small Cap 250 TRI fell by 5.50%. Against that, Sameeksha PMS (Portfolio Management Service = Separately Managed Accounts) was down by 4.61% (net of all fees and expenses), indicating an underperformance of 1.27% against S&P BSE 500 TRI and an outperformance of 0.90% against NIFTY Small Cap 250 TRI; while having cash levels of 9.2% at the start of the month and 9.5% at the end of the month. Still, January marked fifty ninth consecutive month of delivering meaningful alpha on a rolling five year period basis.

Sameeksha Domestic AIF (Alternative Investment Fund = “Hedge Fund”) recently completed four years of operating history. This AIF ranks at number four out of fifty Long-Only AIFs reporting their performance to PMS Bazaar for three-year period ending 31st January, 2026.  January marked twelfth consecutive months of delivering alpha on a rolling three year period basis. In January, 2026, our AIF was down by 3.88% (post fees, expenses and taxes), indicating a slight  underperformance of 0.54% over the benchmark.

After rising 535% on absolute terms and 51% annualized over a period from March 25, 2020 to September 23, 2024, Nifty Small Cap 250 TRI index has struggled, falling 11% since then till 31st Jan 2026. Given the weak performance of the Indian market over this period of almost eighteen months, it is worth looking back at our performance during this period of extended slump. During the said period, Nifty Small Cap 250 TRI is down 11%, BSE 500 TRI is down 6% and against that  our PMS is down 3.8% on a post fees and expenses basis and our AIF is down 1.1% on post fees, expenses and tax basis. Considering consistently high (~60%) exposure to small cap and below space in our strategy, performance comparison with both the broad BSE 500 TRI and Nifty Small Cap 250 TRI is appropriate.

PMS Performance and other details

Three important things must always be kept in mind when looking at performance data. First, for funds such as ours that do not follow a model portfolio strategy, the performance of individual clients over different durations is important to examine. Second, some PMSes may charge fees outside the PMS, which could make their performance data non-comparable to ours after fees. Third, it is important to look at not only portfolio returns but also risk-adjusted ratios. We provide data to address all three points later in this note.

Aggregate Portfolio Performance and ranking on a rolling period basis

Rolling returns are a more useful indicator of consistency in performance versus single-period returns. For the rolling five-year periods applicable from March 2021 till date, Sameeksha PMS has delivered aggregate annualized alpha 100% of the time (59 out of 59 observations), ranging from ~5% to ~16%.  For the rolling three-year periods applicable from January 2020 till date,  Sameeksha PMS has delivered aggregate annualized alpha 100% of the time (73 out of 73 observations), ranging from ~1% to ~23% (Table 1). For both rolling five and three-year periods covered in Table 1, alpha has averaged around 9.3% and 10% respectively. 

To analyze the rolling five-year and three-year returns, we did an insightful exercise, analyzing average five-year and three-year rolling returns across different time frames. 

The table below (Table 2) presents Sameeksha PMS’s portfolio performance using rolling five-year and three-year returns. This method evaluates returns over overlapping periods ending on each date within a given time range. By averaging these rolling returns over different lookback periods, we gain a deeper understanding of how consistently the portfolio has delivered value over time, compared to the BSE 500 TRI benchmark.

The results reveal a strong and persistent pattern of outperformance. Across all measured periods, average three-year or five-year rolling returns have consistently outpaced the benchmark. What stands out in particular is the stability of alpha across different lookback periods. This consistency suggests that the portfolio’s success is not driven by isolated bets or favorable market timing, but rather by a disciplined and repeatable process. The rolling return framework helps illustrate that this performance is not a result of temporary market positioning but instead reflects a reliable, long-term approach to investing.

Risk Adjusted Ratios: Not all returns are the same, Higher Returns at lower Risk  

When compared on a risk-adjusted basis, our PMS has shown an even stronger performance. The Information Ratio (IR) measures the excess return of a portfolio over a benchmark per unit of active risk. A higher Information Ratio suggests better risk-adjusted performance.

Moreover, Upside Capture measures how well a fund performs as compared to a benchmark when the benchmark has positive returns. A higher upside capture ratio (>100%) indicates that the fund captures more of the benchmark’s positive movements. Whereas, Downside Capture measures how well a fund performs compared to a benchmark when the benchmark has negative returns. A lower downside capture ratio (<100%) indicates that the fund preserves capital better during market downturns (Table 3A).

Furthermore, other risk-adjusted returns – Sharpe ratio is also significantly higher. The Sortino ratio measures the risk-adjusted return of an investment, focusing only on the downside risk. A higher Sortino ratio indicates better risk-adjusted returns, particularly concerning downside risk (Table 3B).

Aggregate Portfolio Returns over various time periods

Sameeksha PMS has delivered a substantial aggregate annual alpha of 64.6% over BSE500 TRI over the ten financial years (including the current incomplete financial year), implying an average alpha of 6.5% since inception (Table 4).

It is important to note that we have maintained relatively higher levels of cash (12.6% on average over the entire period since inception) from time to time throughout the management of the portfolio. Notwithstanding the same, from inception, over five years and three years respectively, we have generated returns of 20.7%, 22.3% and 23.3% in INR terms and 17.0%, 16.8%, and 18.7% in USD terms, thus generating substantial alpha over the Indian benchmark BSE500 TRI. Also, we have delivered strong returns relative to benchmark across various key time periods (Figure 1 and Table 5).

Performance within the PMS Universe

We continue to maintain our top rankings both within the multicap PMS universe as well as the entire PMS universe for key periods of three and five years. The multicap PMS universe rankings are more relevant to us since we follow the multicap strategy. 

For rolling three-year periods applicable since January 2020, we have been ranked among the multicap universe in the Top Decile 61.6% of the time (45 out of 73 observations) and in the Top Quartile 97.3% of the time (71 out of 73 observations). For rolling five-year periods applicable to our entire operating history, we have been ranked among the multicap universe in the Top Quartile 100% (59 out of 59 observations) and Top Decile 94.9% of the time (56 out of 59 observations) (Tables 6 and 7).

We present our rankings among the multicap PMSes across all AUM sizes. Within this universe, we are 20th out of 132 PMSes for the five year period and 28th out of 179 PMSes for three-year period, highlighting our superior performance over the long term periods (Table 8). Among the multicap universe across all AUM sizes, we are consistently ranked in the Top Decile for the five-year period for 56 out of 59 observations, reflecting well on the consistency of our performance.

Returns of Individual Portfolios 

Because we don’t follow a model portfolio strategy, the performance of individual clients is far more important than overall portfolio aggregate returns  (Figure 2). For investors who have been with us for five years or more, Sameeksha PMS has returned a very substantial alpha with an average annualized alpha of approx. 4.4% for the five years ending 31st January, 2026. Similarly, for investors who have been with us for three years or more, Sameeksha PMS has returned substantial alpha with an average annualized alpha of approx. 6% for the three years ending 31st January, 2026. The Figure below shows the average annualized returns and alpha over different periods of time of all the clients as on 31st January, 2026

Performance Of PMS Over The Covid Timeline (Pre, During, And Post) 

The COVID-19 pandemic induced significant volatility in the equity markets. Hence, it is useful to look at the performance across three time slices: Pre-COVID, During Covid, and Post-Covid. Sameeksha PMS has outperformed the benchmark across all three time periods with meaningful alpha (Table 9). This consistency of performance may be an important factor in comparing us with the other funds.

Aggregate Portfolio Performance on a financial year and calendar year basis

For January, Sameeksha PMS has underperformed the benchmark BSE 500 TRI by 1.3%. For Financial Year 2025-26, we have underperformed BSE500 TRI by 4%. Looking at our performance over the financial years (Figure 3), we have outperformed our benchmark in seven out of ten financial years. Key however, is that the sum of outperformance of 78.4% in those seven years far exceeds the sum of underperformance of 13.8% in the remaining three years.

For the Calendar Year 2026, our performance was roughly 1.3% lower than the BSE 500 TRI benchmark, indicating underperformance. Looking at our performance over calendar years (Figure 4), we have outperformed the benchmark in six out of eleven calendar years, and the sum of outperformance of 88.4% in six years far exceeds the sum of underperformance of 20.1% in the remaining five years.

It is important to note that we delivered this alpha despite maintaining an average cash level of 12.5% across the ten financial years.

Cumulative Performance versus the benchmark

Sameeksha PMS’s outperformance over its benchmark has continued to widen positively over the years. An investment of Rs. 100 with us since inception (March 2016) would have grown to Rs. 628, far outpacing what one would have earned by investing in a fund that achieved benchmark returns (Figure 5). 

Analyzing the sector performance during the month

The PMS portfolio underperformed the benchmark in January 2026. The portfolio performed well in sectors like Crude Oil, Telecom, Power and FMCG with additional support from Realty, Retailing and Automobile & Ancillaries relative to the benchmark. However, sectors such as Aviation, Business Services, Building Materials, Finance, Chemicals and Healthcare underperformed significantly relatively to the benchmark. Overall, while selective sector exposures added value, broad-based weakness across several key segments led to portfolio underperformance for the month.

Below is the contribution analysis for the month of January 2026 (Table 10). 

AIF Performance and other details

Aggregate Fund Returns over various time periods 

Since inception, we have maintained relatively higher levels of cash (14.4% on average over the entire period from inception) from time to time throughout the management of the fund. Notwithstanding the same, from inception, over three years and two years, we have generated returns of 17.6%, 21.5% and 9% in INR terms and 12%, 17% and 3.8% in USD terms, beating the benchmark BSE 500 TRI returns and ETF tracking S&P 500 index, respectively, after fees and taxes (Table 11).

Aggregate Fund Performance on a Financial Year and Calendar Year basis

For FY26, Sameeksha AIF has underperformed the benchmark BSE 500 TRI by generating 4.6% returns against the benchmark BSE 500 TRI returns of 8.8%.  Looking at our performance over the financial years (Table 12), we have outperformed our benchmark in FY 2023, FY 2024, and FY 2025.

For the Calendar year 2026, we have underperformed the benchmark BSE 500 TRI by -0.5%. Despite being a new fund, we were still able to produce alpha for calendar years 2022, 2023, and 2024 and outperformed the benchmark BSE500 TRI by 2.2%, 20.3% and 4.4% respectively (Table 13).

Risk Adjusted Ratios

When compared on a risk-adjusted basis, our AIF has shown an even stronger performance. The Information Ratio (IR) measures the excess return of a portfolio over a benchmark per unit of active risk. A higher Information Ratio (IR) suggests better risk-adjusted performance. 

Moreover, Upside Capture measures how well a fund performs as compared to a benchmark when the benchmark has positive returns. A higher upside capture ratio (> 100%) indicates that the fund captures more of the benchmark’s positive movements. Whereas, Downside Capture measures how well a fund performs compared to a benchmark when the benchmark has negative returns. A lower downside capture ratio (< 100%) indicates that the fund preserves capital better during market downturns (Table 14A).

Furthermore, other risk-adjusted returns – Sharpe ratio is also significantly higher. The Sortino ratio measures the risk-adjusted return of an investment, focusing only on the downside risk. A higher Sortino ratio indicates better risk-adjusted returns, particularly concerning downside risk (Table 14B).

Performance within the AIF Universe

We present our rankings among Long Only Category III AIFs. For the period ending 31st January, 2026, we are ranked 4th out of 50 AIFs for the three-year period, 18th out of 69 AIFs for the two-year period, and 23rd out of 91 AIFs for the one-year period (Table 15). Sameeksha has been Top Decile consistently in the last three years. Because there is a lot of divergence in the way funds report their returns (post-exp & tax; post-exp, pre-tax; gross returns, and post-exp & tax pre-perf. fees &), we are doing a comparison on gross return basis to cover the entire applicable universe of funds.

Cumulative Performance versus the benchmark

Sameeksha AIF’s outperformance over its benchmark has continued to widen positively since inception. An investment of Rs. 100 with us since inception (Feb 10, 2022) would have grown to Rs. 191, far outpacing what one would have earned by investing in a fund that achieved benchmark returns (Figure 6).

Analyzing the sector performance during the month

The AIF portfolio underperformed the benchmark in January 2026. The portfolio delivered strong relative performance in sectors such as Crude Oil, Telecom, Power, Automobile & Ancillaries, and FMCG, with additional support from Realty, Retailing, Infrastructure, IT, and Hospitality versus the benchmark. However, sectors including Aviation, Building Material, Chemicals, Business Services, Healthcare, and Finance underperformed materially relative to the benchmark. Overall, while selective sector exposures contributed positively, broad-based weakness across several key segments resulted in portfolio underperformance for the month.

Below is the contribution analysis for the month of January 2026 (Table 16).

Disclaimer – The information contained in this update is provided by our fund accounting platform and is not audited. This document is for informational purposes only and is not intended for solicitation to residents of the United States or any other jurisdiction that would subject Sameeksha Capital or its affiliates to any registration requirement within such jurisdiction or country. It does not constitute an offer to buy or sell securities or financial instruments. Recipients are advised to conduct their own research and seek professional advice before making any investment decisions.

Q. Is it compulsory for the investors to use the new handle only? 
Ans. The investors can choose their preferred mode of payment, such as UPI, IMPS, NEFT, RTGS, or Cheques. If an investor opts to use UPI for the payment to registered intermediaries, then they have to do so only using the new UPI IDs allotted to registered intermediaries. 

Q. What should investors check while making payment using the new UPI IDs/ QR Code? 
Ans. Investors need to keep following things into consideration: 
1. The UPI ID should properly show the name of the intermediary, followed by the short abbreviation of their category for example “brk” for Brokers, “mf” for Mutual Funds to the left of the “@” character. 
2. On the right side of the “@”, the new and exclusive handle “@valid” should be present, followed by the bank name. 
3. On the confirmation screen, the app should show a white thumbs-up icon inside a green triangle. 
4. The QR code generated using the utility will have a white thumbs-up icon inside a green triangle. It will also display the UPI ID just below the QR code. 

Q. Do investors also need to obtain new UPI handles to transact in the securities market? 
Ans. No, the new UPI IDs are only for intermediaries to obtain and investors can continue to use their existing UPI IDs. 

Q. Whom to approach if my transaction/ payment fails with the new UPI ID? 
Ans. The secure validated UPI ID of intermediaries will use the same banking channel as the earlier generic UPI handles. In case of any technical difficulty, investors are requested to approach their respective bank.

Q. What is the UPI transaction limit?
Ans. The transaction limit is 5 lakh and cumulated daily limit is 10 lakh.

Among The Most Successful Professionals In Equities; Rated The #1 Technology Sector Analyst In Institutional Investors Polls For A Decade. Highly Respected Among Peers For His Path-Breaking Work And Thought Leadership. Rose From An Associate To Managing Director Within A Span Of Six Years In The Investment Banking Industry

Twenty Years Of Experience Building Top Research Franchises: Seven Years As Managing Director And The Global Head Of Technology At JP Morgan, Six Years As Director And Head Of Asia Pacific Technology At Credit Suisse And Five Years As Founder Of Equirus SecuritiesTrack Record Of Innovation And Excellence In Equity Research

Anchored The Rise Of Credit Suisse  From An Unknown Name In Asian Equities To A Number One Ranked Firm In Asian Equities; Head Of Asia Pacific Tech Research

Credited For Building Top Ranked Global As Well As Asian Tech Research Practice At JP Morgan As MD And Global Head Of Tech Research; Made Defining Contribution To Enable JPMorgan To Move From An Also-Ran Player To A Top Global Name In Equity Research

Built A Very Profitable And Award Winning Indian Equity Business At Equirus From Scratch On A Tiny Budget; Achieved Number Two Ranking In Asia For Idea Performance

Impeccable Track Record Of Identifying True Long Term Winners Ahead Of Others Including Samsung Electronics, TSMC, Infosys And TCS And Guiding Investors To Stay Clear Of Laggards Such As UMC And SMIC Years Ahead Of Consensus.

Mind Of An Engineer, Worked In A Team That Designed The World’s Fastest Microprocessor With A Manta “Paranoia Is The Safest Frame Of Mind”. Awarded Two US Patents.

Work Experience Of Designing The World’s Fastest Microprocessors Based On Cutting Edge Technology For Which He Jointly Holds Two US Patents

Best In Class Business Education From The World Renowned Business School: Double Major In Economics And Finance, Beta Gamma Sigma Cum Laude From The University Of Chicago Booth. Excelled In Studies Under World Renowned Faculty Such As Dr. Raghuram Rajan, Former Governor Of The Reserve Bank Of India