RupeeCase Allcap vs Nifty BeES (ETF)
Rules-based momentum over Nifty 50 vs the Nifty 50 ETF itself. Over the 5-year backtest, the momentum pick lagged the passive index | the trade-off is concentration and turnover, against the passive structure of the index.
Side by side
What actually differentiates them
The Nifty BeES ETF gives you all 50 constituents market-cap-weighted for 4 basis points. RupeeCase Allcap runs a concentrated 10-stock momentum pick and has higher volatility and fees. Where RupeeCase earns its keep: when the momentum regime is strong and the top-10 names meaningfully outperform the broad index. Honest take: if you want pure index exposure, buy the ETF. If you want systematic factor tilt on top of the Nifty 50, that is what the strategy is for.
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. Nippon India Nifty 50 BeES 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.