RupeeCase Allcap vs Mirae Asset Large Cap Fund
Rules-based Nifty 50 momentum vs an actively managed large-cap mutual fund. Same universe in spirit, different selection process and ownership structure.
Side by side
What actually differentiates them
Mirae Large Cap is an active fund benchmarked to Nifty 100, picked by a PM team with monthly portfolio disclosure. RupeeCase Allcap runs a fortnightly momentum screen across Nifty 50 and delivers the 10 stocks to your own demat. Active management can outperform in calm regimes but carries manager-change risk; the systematic screen has no such risk but can lag when a strong narrative outperforms raw price momentum. If you want daily transparency and direct ownership, RupeeCase fits; if you want an outsourced manager across a broader large-cap universe, Mirae fits.
Which one should you pick
The honest answer is that this is rarely a binary. Most Indian investors benefit from a core of low-cost passive (index funds or ETFs) plus a satellite of actively managed or rules-based strategies. Mirae Asset Large Cap Fund is sized for the satellite bucket in most portfolios. RupeeCase Allcap gives you a transparent, rules-based way to tilt the core toward momentum factor, with daily visibility into what you own.
If transparency, flat-fee structure, and no lock-in matter to you more than chasing the last 200 basis points of return, RupeeCase Allcap fits naturally. If you want a larger universe or active manager alpha, the fund is the better fit.