Close Menu
New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    What's Hot

    India’s Youth Are Not a Lost Generation, They Are a Political Reckoning

    Rajesh Exports Scam: Why This Should Worry Regulators Far More Than Investors

    An Island at the Crossroads: Great Nicobar’s Promise or Peril?

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    Subscribe Monday, June 15
    • HOME
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • STATECRAFT
      • CENTRE
      • EAST
      • WEST
      • NORTH
      • SOUTH
      • NORTHEAST
    • WORLDVIEW
    • PERSPECTIVE
    • CONVERSATION
    • LIFE & STYLE
      • BOOK
      • FOODIE
      • ART & CULTURE
      • GLAMOUR
      • HEALTH
      • RELATIONSHIP
      • TREND
      • TRAVEL
    • MISC.
      • BEYOND FILTERS
      • DIASPORA
      • EARTH
      • ECONOMY
      • EXPLAINED
      • FUTURE
      • NEWSMAKER
      • OFFBEAT
      • PLAYING TO THE GALLERY
      • SPORTS
      • SCIENCE & TECH
    • Magazine
    New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    Home»Misc...»Economy

    Beyond Market Noise: Why Arbitrage Funds and Defence Stocks Are Finding Favour

    Anirudh GuptaBy Anirudh Gupta
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp

    In uncertain markets, investors often look for certainty in the wrong places. They chase excitement when they need stability, or they seek safety so aggressively that they miss the opportunities quietly compounding in front of them. In the current environment, three signals stand out clearly: arbitrage and low-duration funds are becoming dominant allocations, defence continues to perform well, and the broader market may remain range-bound for some time. Put together, these are not isolated facts. They tell a larger story about how capital is choosing discipline over drama.

    For many investors, this is a season for patience rather than aggression. Liquidity remains important, visibility is uneven, and market leadership is narrow. In such a backdrop, arbitrage funds have gained preference because they offer relatively efficient parking for money without taking excessive directional risk. Low-duration funds, too, appeal to investors who want greater stability and flexibility. Meanwhile, defence stocks have emerged as a strong theme, supported by long-term policy focus, domestic manufacturing priorities, and structural order-book momentum. Add to that the likelihood of a market that trades sideways for a while, and the case for selective positioning becomes even stronger.

    A Client Story

    A few months ago, a family-owned business group approached us with a familiar concern. Their treasury portfolio had grown meaningfully, but the promoters were uncomfortable with putting too much money into a volatile equity market. They were not looking for maximum returns. They were looking for intelligent deployment.

    The group had recently sold a non-core asset and was sitting on surplus cash. Their first instinct was to wait. “Let the market correct,” they said. “Then we will invest.” It was a reasonable thought, but the challenge was that no one knew when that correction would come, or how deep it would be. More importantly, their cash was earning too little while remaining idle.

    We studied their needs in layers. Part of the money had to stay liquid for operational flexibility. Part of it could earn a stable short-term return. A smaller portion could be deployed into ideas with stronger medium-term conviction. The answer was not one product, but a structure.

    We recommended a larger allocation to arbitrage funds for cash-like deployment with equity tax efficiency, along with low-duration funds for the portion that needed steady income and lower interest-rate risk. For the strategic equity sleeve, we suggested selective exposure to defence-related opportunities, not as a broad market bet, but as a thematic allocation backed by long-term policy support and sector visibility.

    The result was not dramatic in the short term. That was precisely the point. The portfolio became more balanced, more purposeful, and far less dependent on timing the next big market move.

    Why This Approach Fits Now

    The current market environment rewards capital discipline. When broader markets are likely to move within a range, the investor’s edge does not come from guessing the next breakout. It comes from managing liquidity well, reducing avoidable risk, and selectively identifying themes with structural support.

    Arbitrage funds have become attractive because they combine relative safety with better post-tax efficiency than many traditional short-term parking options. Low-duration funds add another layer of stability for investors who want modest return potential without taking on too much duration risk. Together, they create a practical base for capital that is waiting for better opportunities.

    Defence, on the other hand, represents the opposite end of the spectrum: not capital preservation, but conviction. It continues to perform well because the sector sits at the intersection of policy, strategic autonomy, and industrial development. In a range-bound market, such selective winners matter more because they can generate returns even when the broader index is not delivering much.

    The additional enabler is the policy calendar. With no elections for the next ten months, there is room for more reforms and execution-focused policy action. Markets often respond not just to announcements, but to continuity. When the policy environment has breathing space, reforms tend to move from intent to implementation. That creates a constructive backdrop for sectors and businesses aligned with national priorities.

    The Bigger Lesson

    The lesson from this moment is simple: in uncertain times, the best strategy is often not to be fully defensive or fully aggressive, but intelligently balanced. Capital should not be idle, but neither should it be forced into risk for the sake of action.

    That is why arbitrage and low-duration funds are finding favour today. That is why defence remains a strong theme. And that is why a range-bound market does not necessarily mean a weak opportunity set. It simply means investors must be more selective, more patient, and more structured.

    Sometimes the most powerful move in investing is not to swing at every pitch. It is to wait for the right one, while keeping your stance ready.

    (Anirudh Gupta is a finance professional. He is the CEO, Ashiana Financial Services, Mumbai)

    Anirudh Gupta
    Anirudh Gupta

    Keep Reading

    The Green Belongs to Her: Why Golf Still Feels Like a Men’s Club

    Inside the Machine: How Algorithms Reproduce India’s Social Hierarchies

    Why women dominate organ donation, and what it says about Indian society

    Waste, Minerals, Climate: Why India Needs a Corporate-Led Reset

    India’s Uncounted Exodus: Climate Migration Haunts the Sundarbans

    The First Decline: Inside the Global Cognitive Slowdown

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • About Us
    • Exclusive
    • statecraft
    • worldview
    • perspective
    • conversation
    • Life & Style
    • Misc.
    • Magazine
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us
    • Exclusive
    • statecraft
    • worldview
    • perspective
    • conversation
    • Life & Style
    • Misc.
    • Magazine
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 New Delhi Post. Designed by Rynow Infotech . All rights reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.