Franklin Templeton Launches Sapphire Equity Long-Short SIF

MySandesh
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Franklin Templeton India has announced the launch of Sapphire Equity Long-Short SIF, its first Specialized Investment Fund (SIF). This is an equity long-short fund launched under the SIF framework.

The fund will invest in stocks from the Nifty 500, which helps provide strong diversification across large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap companies.

Sapphire Equity Long-Short SIF aims to grow investors’ wealth over the long term across different market conditions.

It follows a unique model-based quantitative strategy that focuses on sound stock selection, dynamic asset allocation, and strong risk management.

NFO: Investment Strategy

This is an open-ended equity investment strategy that invests in shares of listed companies and related instruments. It also includes limited short positions through derivatives.

The strategy aims to generate better long-term returns by investing across large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap stocks using a long/short equity approach. However, there is no guarantee that the investment objective will be fully achieved.

NFO Dates and Key Details

NFO Opening Date: April 10, 2026

NFO Closing Date: April 24, 2026

Reopening for Buying and Selling: May 4, 2026

Fund Manager: Arihant Jain

Minimum Investment Amount: Rs 10 lakh for the first investment

Additional Investment: In multiples of Rs 10,000

Benchmark: Nifty 500 TRI

Exit Load: 1% if withdrawn within 1 year, no charge after that

Also Read: SBI Mutual Fund’s scheme has increased wealth 16 times in 16 years, with a strong 18% CAGR, and has also performed well in 10-year and 15-year SIPs.

How Stocks Are Selected

The portfolio is built using a disciplined and research-based process.

The investment team uses its experience and studies several important factors, including:

liquidity

sector exposure

company size

risk

investment style

This helps in selecting stocks more effectively.

Why Is It Different From Other Schemes?

According to Avinash Satwelkar, President of Franklin Templeton India, one key difference between SIFs and traditional mutual funds is that SIFs can take short positions of up to 25% of total net assets.

This allows the fund to benefit from market movements and can help reduce losses during market downturns.

SIFs are mainly designed for investors who are ready to take higher risk. They offer the possibility of relatively higher returns and may also provide tax advantages.

Also Read: These 5 mutual funds are leading the 15-year return chart, and each of them has increased investors’ money by at least 13 times.

What the Quantitative Model Does

According to Arihant Jain, Portfolio Manager of Sapphire Equity Long Short SIF, the strategy uses a quantitative model to analyze stocks using multiple indicators.

These include both:

leading indicators

lagging indicators

This is important because different indicators perform better in different market conditions.

The system scores and ranks stocks to identify the right long (buy) and short (sell) positions.

This helps the fund respond to market changes in a more balanced and systematic way. The model is also designed to adapt over time, while keeping risk management as a top priority.

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