Flexi-Cap Fund

Flexi-Cap Fund

A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization. Unlike other funds, such as mid-cap or small-cap funds, the size of a company is not a constraint for flexi-cap funds. Unlike other funds, such as mid-cap or small-cap funds, the size of a company is not a constraint for flexi-cap funds. A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization. A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization.

A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization.

What Is a Flexi-Cap Fund?

A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization. This type of fund structure will be indicated in the fund's prospectus. A flexi-cap fund can provide the fund manager with greater investment choices and diversification possibilities.

A flexi-cap fund is a type of mutual fund that is not restricted to investing in companies with a predetermined market capitalization.
A flexi-cap fund can provide the fund manager with greater investment choices and diversification possibilities.
Unlike other funds, such as mid-cap or small-cap funds, the size of a company is not a constraint for flexi-cap funds.
A flexi-cap fund may invest in any company, regardless of the company's size.

How a Flexi-Cap Fund Works

Unlike other funds, such as mid-cap or small-cap funds, the size of a company is not a constraint for flexi-cap funds. A flexi-cap fund may invest in any company, regardless of the company's size.

Types of Companies by Market Cap

Market capitalization is one of the most common ways mutual funds select companies in which to invest. Market capitalization refers to the total dollar market value of a company's outstanding shares. Market capitalization is commonly referred to as "market cap." Market cap is calculated by multiplying a company's shares outstanding by the current market price of one share.

Using market capitalization to show the size of a company is important because company size is a basic determinant of various characteristics in which investors are interested (including risk).

Example of a Flexi-Cap Fund

The Fidelity Stock Selector All-Cap Fund is a diversified domestic equity strategy that invests broadly across all sectors, market capitalizations, and styles. The fund is managed by a member of Fidelity's Global Asset Allocation division and a team of sector portfolio managers. Portfolio sector weightings are kept similar to those of its benchmark in an effort to add value through active stock selection and also to minimize the risks associated with sector or market timing.

The fund had a 10-year annualized return of 14.51% as of August 31, 2020, compared with 14.88% for its U.S. large growth benchmark. Its 10 largest holdings, which made up 25.46% of the fund, were:

Related terms:

Large Cap (Big Cap)

Large cap (big cap) refers to a company with a market capitalization value of more than $10 billion. read more

Market Capitalization

Market capitalization is the total dollar market value of all of a company's outstanding shares. read more

Mid-Cap Fund

A mid-cap fund is a type of investment fund that focuses its investments on companies with a capitalization in the middle range of listed stocks in the market. read more

Mid-Cap

Mid-cap is the term given to companies with a market capitalization—or market value—between $2 and $10 billion. read more

Mutual Fund

A mutual fund is a type of investment vehicle consisting of a portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities, which is overseen by a professional money manager. read more

Outstanding Shares

Shares outstanding refer to a company's stock currently held by all its shareholders, including share blocks held by institutional investors and restricted shares owned by the company’s insiders. read more

Russell 2000 Index

The Russell 2000 index measures the performance of the 2,000 smaller stocks that are listed in the Russell 3000 Index. read more

Small Cap

The definition of small cap can vary among brokerages, but generally, it is a company with a market capitalization of between $300 million and $2 billion. read more

Small-Value Stock

Small-value stock refers to a small market capitalization stock, but the term also refers to stock that is trading at or below its book value. read more

Total Stock Fund

A total stock fund is typically a broad index fund designed to mirror the performance of the overall equity market.  read more