850-Point Market Rally and My Mutual Fund Dilemma: Why I Parked My Money in an Arbitrage Fund Instead of Chasing the Market
When the Market Jumps 850 Points:
Why I Parked My Money in an Arbitrage Fund Instead of Panic Investing
A real-life story about portfolio rebalancing, market psychology, and why doing nothing for a few days can sometimes be the smartest financial decision you make.
The Story: A Single Day That Changed My Plan
It started as a perfectly ordinary Tuesday morning. I had been quietly rebalancing my mutual fund portfolio for a few weeks — shifting some allocation from midcap equity to a flexi-cap fund, trimming a sectoral position that had run its course, and generally tidying up the portfolio like you’d reorganise a wardrobe before monsoon. Nothing dramatic. Just thoughtful, planned rebalancing.
The redemption amount — a tidy chunk, not something you’d sneeze at — finally landed in my savings account that morning. I made myself a second cup of filter coffee and opened the trading app, fully intending to click “invest” into my chosen equity mutual funds. And then I saw it: the Sensex had shot up by nearly 850 points in a single session. The Nifty wasn’t far behind. Global cues were positive, some geopolitical tension had eased overnight, and foreign institutional investors had apparently rediscovered their love for Indian equities.
My finger hovered over the “Invest” button. And then — I put the phone face-down on the table.
Something felt off. Not wrong, exactly. Just… rushed. I’d spent weeks thinking carefully about where to deploy this money. Was I really going to rush it into equity mutual funds on a day the market had surged nearly a percent, purely because the money was sitting there and I was a little anxious about it being idle?
That pause — that moment of deliberate restraint — is what this article is about. Because it led me to a decision that I think more Indian investors should know about: temporarily parking redeemed funds in an arbitrage fund while waiting for a more comfortable re-entry point into equity mutual funds.
Rebalancing Is Not Panic Selling
Before we go further, let’s clear the air on something. When I told a friend I had redeemed some equity mutual funds, his immediate reaction was: “Oh no, bhai, you sold at the wrong time?” And I had to explain — no, this wasn’t panic selling. This was portfolio rebalancing. These are very different things, and conflating them is one of the most common misunderstandings in personal finance.
What Is Portfolio Rebalancing?
When you start investing, you set a target asset allocation — let’s say 70% equity, 20% debt, 10% gold. Over time, as markets move, these proportions drift. Your equity allocation might have swelled to 82% after a strong bull run. Rebalancing simply means you trim what has grown too large and add to what has shrunk — bringing your portfolio back to its original target.
This is not panic. This is discipline. In fact, rebalancing is often counter-emotional — it means selling what has done well (which feels uncomfortable) and buying what has underperformed (which feels even more uncomfortable). It is the investing equivalent of “buy low, sell high,” executed systematically rather than emotionally.
“Rebalancing is the art of selling what feels good and buying what feels scary — repeatedly, without letting your feelings get a vote.”
— Every sensible financial planner who ever livedWhy Rebalancing Gets Mistaken for Panic Selling
The confusion arises because both actions look the same on the surface: you sold your mutual fund units. But the intent, the timing, and the plan are entirely different. Panic selling happens when fear drives you to exit everything. Rebalancing happens when a pre-decided plan tells you to shift allocation. One is reactive. The other is proactive. One destroys wealth. The other protects it over long periods.
In my case, I had redeemed specific funds with a specific purpose: to reinvest into different equity mutual funds that I felt were better aligned with my long-term goals. The money was always going to go back into the market. The only question was when, and into what, and at what price.
What I Learnt From Watching an 850-Point Rally
Here is the brutal truth about markets: they don’t care about your plans. They go up when you want to buy. They go down when you want to sell. They stay flat when you’re impatient. And on a random Tuesday, they spike 850 points because of something happening in geopolitics, thousands of kilometres away from Bengaluru, that has absolutely nothing to do with your SIP or your retirement target.
The 850-point rally I witnessed that morning was driven by a combination of easing global tensions, a favorable US Fed commentary, and strong FII buying. These are legitimate reasons for markets to rally. But they are also temporary triggers — the kind that can reverse just as sharply within the next three sessions if the geopolitical situation shifts again.
The Psychology of FOMO at Market Peaks
When you see a sharp single-day rally, something primal kicks in. It’s called FOMO — Fear Of Missing Out. Your brain starts doing this calculation: “The market just went up 1%. If I don’t invest today, it might go up another 2% tomorrow. I’ll miss the rally! I’ll be left behind!” And before you know it, you’ve invested a lump sum at what might be a short-term peak, simply because inaction felt more uncomfortable than action.
Behavioural finance calls this “action bias” — the tendency to feel that doing something, anything, is better than doing nothing, even when doing nothing is the objectively correct response. Football goalkeepers have the same bias, by the way. Research shows they dive left or right even when staying in the centre would statistically save more penalty kicks. But staying still feels passive, and passive feels like failure.
Investing after a sharp single-day rally because you’re afraid of missing out is the financial equivalent of diving the wrong way on a penalty kick.
Market Timing vs Time in the Market
There’s a famous saying in investing: “Time in the market beats timing the market.” And that’s broadly true for long-term SIP investors who keep investing through thick and thin. But this doesn’t mean you should be indifferent to valuation at the moment of deploying a significant lump sum. When you’re investing a large one-time amount — say, funds from a redemption — the entry point matters more than it does for a monthly SIP of ₹5,000. A poorly-timed large lump sum can take years to recover if you enter at the peak of a sharp rally.
Why Doing Nothing for a Few Days Can Sometimes Be the Smartest Move
This section might be the most important thing you read today, because it goes against everything that financial media tells you. The narrative is always: invest early, invest now, don’t wait, time in the market, compound interest, etc. And most of the time, that advice is excellent. But “doing nothing” here doesn’t mean ignoring your money. It means making a deliberate, active decision to wait — and parking your money somewhere intelligent while you wait.
Think of it like this. You’re driving from Bengaluru to Mysuru on a Sunday morning. You check Google Maps and the toll highway is completely jammed — an accident three kilometres ahead, traffic backed up for two hours. Do you: (a) keep driving straight into the jam because “you should always keep moving,” or (b) pull into a petrol station, get a chai, wait 45 minutes for the jam to clear, and then continue your journey?
Option B is smarter. You’re not abandoning the journey. You’re not changing your destination. You’re simply pausing intelligently, using the waiting time productively (chai!), and then resuming when conditions improve. This is exactly what parking redeemed mutual fund money in an arbitrage fund feels like.
“Waiting with a purpose is not the same as being idle. The investor who waits in an arbitrage fund is still in the market — just standing by the sidelines, watching the game before deciding which team to back.”
Historically, after sharp single-day rallies driven by global cues rather than domestic fundamentals, markets often consolidate or pull back mildly over the following week or two. This gives patient investors a slightly better entry point without meaningfully sacrificing long-term returns. No, you can’t predict this with certainty. But giving yourself a 7-14 day window to watch how the market digests a sharp rally is not irresponsible — it’s rational.
The key is to not let this temporary pause become permanent hesitation. Set a deadline. Tell yourself: “I will invest this money systematically into equity mutual funds over the next 4-8 weeks, regardless of what the market does.” Then hold yourself to it.
How Arbitrage Funds Work — Simply Explained
If you’ve never encountered arbitrage funds before, don’t worry. Most people haven’t. They live quietly in the shadows of the mutual fund world, not glamorous enough for prime-time financial news, not boring enough to be ignored completely. Let me explain how they work with zero jargon.
The Basic Concept of Arbitrage
Arbitrage, in its simplest form, is the practice of profiting from price differences in two different markets for the same asset. In equity markets, a stock might trade at ₹100 in the cash (spot) market today, while its one-month futures contract trades at ₹101.50. An arbitrage fund simultaneously buys the stock in the cash market and sells its futures. It locks in that ₹1.50 difference as a near-risk-free profit. When the futures contract expires, the prices converge, the fund closes both positions, and pockets the spread.
This is done across dozens of stock pairs simultaneously by professional fund managers and algorithms. The result is a fund that is almost always 65% or more invested in equities (satisfying the regulatory definition of an equity fund for tax purposes) while maintaining a near-neutral position on market direction — meaning it doesn’t go up or down significantly with the Sensex.
What This Means for You
An arbitrage fund is not trying to beat the market. It’s not taking a view on whether Reliance Industries or Infosys will go up or down. It’s harvesting tiny, consistent spreads — usually delivering 5-7% annualised returns, often slightly better in periods of high market volatility (when arbitrage spreads tend to widen). It’s liquid, it’s low-risk, and — crucially — it’s taxed like an equity mutual fund.
How Arbitrage Funds Quietly Protect Investor Psychology
Here’s something the financial industry doesn’t talk about enough: the psychological function of where you park your money during a waiting period profoundly affects your decision-making afterwards.
If your redeemed money is sitting in your savings account, you’ll check it every morning. You’ll watch it doing “nothing.” You’ll see the market rally again, and the anxiety of your money being idle will eventually override your discipline. You’ll invest at the wrong time, just to make the anxiety go away. Behavioural finance researchers call this “portfolio neglect anxiety” — the discomfort of seeing money not working hard enough.
Now contrast this with money parked in an arbitrage fund. Every morning, the NAV ticks up a little. Not dramatically — maybe 15-20 paisa. But it’s moving. It’s working. The money is invested in a mutual fund. You can see it on your portfolio app. Your brain registers this as “active.” The anxiety of idle money largely disappears. And paradoxically, this calm allows you to make better decisions about when to deploy into equity mutual funds.
This is not a trivial point. Half the mistakes investors make — over-trading, panic selling, chasing rallies — stem from discomfort with inaction. Arbitrage funds give you a psychologically comfortable parking space that removes that discomfort without exposing you to market risk.
Arbitrage Fund vs Liquid Fund vs Savings Account
So you have redeemed mutual fund money sitting around. Where should it go while you decide on the next investment? Let’s compare your three main options honestly.
| Feature | Savings Account | Liquid Fund | Arbitrage Fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical Returns | 2.5–4% p.a. | 6–7% p.a. | 5.5–7% p.a. |
| Risk Level | Negligible | Very Low | Low |
| Taxation | As income (slab rate) | As income (slab rate) | Equity fund taxation* |
| STCG (under 1 year) | N/A | At your slab rate | 15% flat |
| LTCG (over 1 year) | N/A | At your slab rate | 10% above ₹1L gain |
| Liquidity | Instant | T+1 day | T+1 to T+3 days |
| Market Sensitivity | None | Minimal | Very Low |
| Ideal Holding Period | Ongoing | 1 day to 3 months | 1 month to 6 months |
| Best For | Emergency fund | Very short-term parking | Waiting before equity reinvestment |
*Arbitrage funds are classified as equity funds for taxation because they maintain 65%+ equity exposure. However, unlike pure equity funds, their actual market risk is very low.
The key insight from this comparison is that if you’re in a 30% income tax bracket, the savings account is quietly destroying your real returns. Every month your money sits in a savings account earning 3.5%, you’re earning roughly 2.45% after tax — and losing purchasing power to inflation. The arbitrage fund, meanwhile, gives you near-equity tax treatment with near-debt risk. For someone parking money for 1-6 months, it’s often the intelligent middle ground.
Tax Efficiency: The Quiet Advantage
Let’s talk about the tax math, because this is where arbitrage funds genuinely shine for investors in higher tax brackets.
Suppose you park ₹10 lakh in a liquid fund for 3 months and earn 1.6% (which annualises to about 6.4%). That’s ₹16,000 in gains. If you’re in the 30% tax bracket, you pay ₹4,800 in tax. Net gain: ₹11,200.
Now suppose you park the same ₹10 lakh in an arbitrage fund for 3 months and earn a similar 1.5%. That’s ₹15,000 in gains. Tax rate? 15% (equity STCG). Tax paid: ₹2,250. Net gain: ₹12,750.
On this one transaction, the arbitrage fund puts an extra ₹1,550 in your pocket compared to the liquid fund — not because it earned more, but because it was taxed less. Scale this up across multiple transactions over a financial year, and the difference becomes meaningful.
Mistakes Investors Make After Sudden Market Rallies
Sharp single-day rallies are like beautiful sunsets — they make you feel things. And feeling things is not always great for investing. Here are the most common errors Indian investors make when they see the market spike suddenly.
1. Panic Investing the Entire Lump Sum Immediately
The fear of missing out is powerful. After an 850-point rally, many investors dump their entire available corpus into equity mutual funds in a single transaction. If the market pulls back over the next two weeks, they’re sitting on paper losses and regretting their impatience. Systematic transfer plans (STPs) from a parking instrument like an arbitrage fund can smooth this out considerably.
2. Abandoning Rebalancing Plans Mid-Way
A sharp rally often makes investors second-guess their rebalancing strategy. “The market is going up, maybe I shouldn’t shift from midcap to flexi-cap right now…” This hesitation breaks the discipline of your original plan and often leads to sub-optimal outcomes. Trust the plan you made when the market was calmer.
3. Confusing Correlation with Causation
Global positive news triggered today’s rally. But Indian market fundamentals haven’t changed overnight. Corporate earnings haven’t improved in a single session. GDP projections remain the same. Yet investors often extrapolate a single strong day into “the bull run is back!” and make aggressive allocation shifts they later regret.
4. Stopping SIPs After a Rally
This is a classic mistake. When markets rise sharply, some investors pause their SIPs thinking “the market is too expensive now.” But your SIP’s whole purpose is to invest through all market conditions — expensive and cheap — averaging your cost over time. Stopping a SIP because of a single-day rally is like giving up on a diet because you had a good weigh-in on Monday.
5. Moving to 100% Cash “Until Things Settle”
Some investors, spooked by elevated valuations after a rally, move everything to cash and vow to “wait for the correction.” The trouble is, they never define what “settled” looks like. Markets can remain at elevated valuations for months or years. The investor who waited for “the right time” in 2014, 2017, or 2021 missed significant gains while sitting on cash.
SIP Discipline: The Antidote to Market-Timing Anxiety
Here’s the beautiful thing about a well-designed SIP strategy: it makes all of the above dilemmas largely irrelevant for the money going through the SIP route. Your ₹10,000 or ₹50,000 monthly SIP goes in on the 5th of every month, regardless of whether the Sensex is at 72,000 or 84,000. You don’t have to think about it. The discipline is built into the mechanism.
The issue we discussed today — sharp rallies creating entry-point anxiety — is primarily a lump sum investing problem. And the solution is to treat your lump sum the way a SIP treats monthly investments: systematically, over time, regardless of daily market movements.
When I finally decided to move my parked arbitrage fund money into equity mutual funds, I set up a Systematic Transfer Plan (STP). Every week, a fixed amount would transfer from the arbitrage fund into the target equity funds. This effectively converted my lump sum into a weekly SIP, averaging my entry price over 6-8 weeks without requiring me to make any further emotional decisions about market timing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion: Calm Is a Strategy
- Rebalance based on your plan, not the market’s mood.
- Park redeemed funds intelligently — not in idle savings.
- Use STPs to deploy lump sums systematically.
- Never stop your SIP because of a single-day rally.
- Let arbitrage funds protect your psychology while protecting your capital.
- Remember: discipline, not drama, builds wealth.
