Cash Holdings in Mutual Funds: What They Really Tell You?

Mutual fund factsheets are full of numbers - sector allocations, top holdings, portfolio turnover, and risk ratios. Yet one number that often gets ignored by distributors and investors alike is cash holding.
At first glance, cash may seem unproductive. After all, investors expect equity funds to be invested in equities. But in reality, cash is an important portfolio management tool, and understanding it can offer meaningful insights into how a fund is being managed.
For mutual fund distributors, analyzing cash holding in mutual funds can help answer several questions:
• Is the fund manager finding enough investment opportunities?
• Is the fund preparing for redemptions?
• Is the portfolio fully deployed or cautiously positioned?
Understanding these nuances can help distributors explain portfolio behaviour better to investors.
Why Do Mutual Funds Hold Cash?
Mutual Fund cash holdings can arise for several operational and strategic reasons.
1. Managing Investor Flows
Mutual funds receive subscriptions and redemptions daily. Keeping some cash helps the fund manager:
• Meet redemption requests
• Avoid forced selling of portfolio stocks
• Maintain liquidity in volatile markets
For funds with high inflows or outflows, cash levels may fluctuate frequently.
2. Deployment Lag After Large Inflows
When funds receive large subscriptions, the money may not be invested immediately.
Fund managers typically take time to:
• Identify suitable stocks
• Build positions gradually
• Avoid pushing prices up in illiquid stocks
During this period, cash levels may temporarily increase. For example, Groww Small Cap Fund was recently launched and hence sits on ~40% cash.
3. Tactical Flexibility
Cash also provides optionality.
If markets correct sharply, a high cash holding mutual fund can deploy capital quickly into attractive opportunities.
This flexibility can be particularly valuable during periods of high volatility. A few flexi cap and value-oriented funds currently hold >15% in cash.
4. Liquidity Management in Mid/Small Caps
Funds investing in mid-cap or small-cap stocks may maintain slightly higher cash levels.
This helps because:
• Some stocks may be difficult to sell quickly
• Market liquidity can disappear during corrections
• Redemption pressure can arise suddenly
Maintaining cash helps prevent distress selling of illiquid positions.
When Cash Holdings Can Signal Something Important
While some cash is normal, persistent high cash levels may indicate certain signals that distributors should understand.
1. Valuation Concerns
If a fund consistently maintains very high cash levels, it may reflect the fund manager’s difficulty in finding attractively priced stocks.
However, SEBI regulations generally require equity funds to remain substantially invested (65% to 80% depending on the category of funds) in equities, so prolonged high cash positions are uncommon.
2. Large Recent Inflows
A sudden jump in cash may simply mean the fund has received significant new subscriptions.
Distributors should therefore always compare:
• Current cash levels
• Previous factsheets
• Recent AUM growth
3. Portfolio Transition
Cash may rise when a fund manager is rebalancing or restructuring the portfolio, especially after a change in market outlook or investment theme.
How MFDs Should Analyze Cash Levels
Instead of viewing cash in isolation, distributors should analyze it in context.
Compare Across Time
Look at cash levels over several months rather than a single factsheet.
Temporary spikes are normal; persistent patterns are more meaningful.
Compare Within the Category
Different categories naturally hold different levels of cash.
For example:
• Large-cap funds often remain almost fully invested
• Small-cap funds may keep slightly higher liquidity buffers
• Hybrid funds may have structurally higher cash positions
Compare With Fund Flows
If a fund’s AUM has grown rapidly in recent months, higher cash may simply reflect deployment lag.
Avoid Over-Interpreting Small Differences
A difference between 3% and 5% cash rarely carries meaningful investment implications.
Focus more on large and persistent deviations.
Cash Is a Tool, Not a View
One common misconception is that cash reflects a market timing call.
In reality, most fund managers do not actively run large cash calls in equity funds because:
• Fund mandates require them to remain invested
• Timing markets consistently is extremely difficult
• Investors expect equity exposure
Cash is therefore usually an operational buffer rather than a directional bet.
However, there may be certain exceptions, particularly in case of hybrid funds. For example, Motilal Oswal Balanced Advantage Fund has been holding high cash levels since October 2025, which may indicate their view on the market.
Similarly, certain schemes like Parag Parikh Flexi Cap, Groww Value, DSP Value etc. are holding a significant portion of residual allocation (that is, the allocation above what is mandatorily required to be invested in equity) in cash – which may suggest specific views on the market by fund managers.
Cash Holdings of Select Funds
Here are the cash holdings of our top ranked funds (as of 28 February 2026) in select categories:
MF Scheme | Cash Holding (%) |
|---|---|
Parag Parikh Flexi Cap | 17.3% |
HDFC Flexi Cap | 6.8% |
Franklin India Flexi Cap | 4.4% |
Nippon India Large Cap | 0.7% |
ICICI Prudential Large Cap | 4.7% |
HDFC Large Cap | 0.9% |
HDFC Mid Cap | 5.8% |
Edelweiss Mid Cap | 3.2% |
Nippon India Growth Mid Cap | 1.3% |
Nippon India Small Cap | 4.1% |
Invesco India Small Cap | 1.0% |
Bandhan Small Cap | 10.3% |
Source: Morningstar
The Distributor’s Role
For mutual fund distributors, understanding portfolio construction improves investor communication.
When markets fall and investors ask why their fund underperformed or outperformed peers, factors such as cash levels, liquidity management, and portfolio positioning can offer useful explanations.
Rather than focusing only on returns, analyzing how a fund is managed can lead to more informed conversations with investors.
Final Thoughts
Cash holdings may look like a small number on a factsheet, but they reveal an important aspect of portfolio management.
For distributors willing to look beyond headline returns, cash levels can provide insights into:
• liquidity management
• fund flows
• portfolio transition
• and availability of investment opportunity
Understanding these subtleties can help distributors move from product sellers to informed advisors.
(Data as of 28 February 2026, last updated 17 March 2026)
Disclaimer: The information provided in this discussion is strictly for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute professional financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks, including the potential loss of principal, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. All specific fund names, historical events, or financial metrics mentioned are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed as recommendations to buy or sell any security. You are strongly advised to consult with a SEBI-registered investment advisor or a qualified financial planner to assess your specific risk profile, tax bracket, and financial goals before making any investment decisions.
Q: What is included in 'cash' holding in a mutual fund?
A: When a factsheet shows cash or cash equivalents, it usually includes:
• Cash in bank accounts
• Treasury bills or very short-term government securities
• Commercial papers or money market instruments
• Reverse repo or TREPS
• Pending settlement balances
In other words, this is the portion of the portfolio not invested in equities or longer-term debt securities.
Q: What is the minimum amount equity mutual funds have to invest in equity instruments?
A: Depending on the category of the equity fund, the amount invested in equity has to be between 65% and 80%. Large Cap, Dividend Yield, Value, Contra, Focused, ELSS, Sectoral and Thematic Funds need to invest atleast 80% in Indian equity instruments, while Mid Cap, Small Cap and Flexi Cap Funds have to invest atleast 65%.
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