HDFC Mutual Fund has launched HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF, an open ended fund of fund investing in units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF. HDFC Asset Management Company Limited is the AMC. The NFO opens on 20 July 2026 and closes on 3 August 2026.
This is the fund of fund route into an ETF that tracks the Nifty Metal Index (TRI). Investors who prefer not to open a demat account can get the same underlying metal sector exposure through this FOF.
HDFC Mutual Fund frames the launch around India’s metal sector, citing capex spending, new demand from AI and data centre buildouts, and policy support for domestic manufacturing. Whether that thesis plays out is separate from whether this structure suits a given investor.
HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF NFO Details
Field | Detail |
Fund name | |
Fund type | Open ended Fund of Fund (Domestic) |
Nature of scheme | Invests in units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF |
Benchmark | Nifty Metal Index (TRI) |
Fund managers | Ms. Nandita Menezes and Mr. Arun Agarwal |
NFO opens | 20 July 2026 |
NFO closes | 3 August 2026 |
Re-opens for sale/repurchase | Within 5 working days of allotment |
Minimum investment (purchase/additional) | Rs 100, and any amount thereafter |
SIP amount | Rs 100 |
NAV during NFO | Rs 10 per unit |
Riskometer | Very High |
Stamp duty | Applicable on allotment; rate not specified in the KIM |
Entry load | Nil (SEBI rules disallow entry loads industry wide) |
Exit load | 1% within 15 days of allotment; nil after |
AMC details
Field | Detail |
AMC name | HDFC Asset Management Company Limited |
AUM | Not available in this KIM |
Website | |
Registered office | HDFC House, Backbay Reclamation, Churchgate, Mumbai 400020 |
Contact number | 022-66316333 / 1800 3010 6767 |
Source: AMFI India, New fund offer | HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF
What has the AMC launched?
HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF does not buy metal company shares directly. It puts investor money into units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF, an exchange traded fund tracking the Nifty Metal Index.
A fund of fund solves one practical problem with ETFs: buying and selling one normally needs a demat and trading account. A FOF wraps the same ETF inside a regular mutual fund structure, so investors can apply through the usual mutual fund route, including SIPs, without a broking account.
This is a passive, index tracking structure, so there is no active stock picking at either level. Returns should move with the Nifty Metal Index, adjusted for costs at both layers. Asset allocation keeps 95 to 100 percent in ETF units, with a small cash buffer for liquidity.
How does the strategy work?
There is no fund manager led stock selection here. The mechanics run through allotment, index tracking, and rebalancing at the underlying ETF level.
Step | What happens |
1 | Investor applies for FOF units, lumpsum or SIP, at Rs 10 per unit during the NFO |
2 | On allotment, the FOF deploys money into HDFC Nifty Metal ETF units |
3 | The ETF holds Nifty Metal Index securities, rebalanced on reconstitution |
4 | The FOF holds 95 to 100 percent in ETF units, rest in cash for liquidity |
5 | The FOF’s NAV tracks the ETF, which tracks the index, net of costs at both levels |
6 | On redemption, the FOF sells ETF units to raise proceeds, subject to exit load |
7 | Proceeds are paid within the regulatory timeline, ordinarily 3 working days |
Let’s understand through an example
Say an investor puts in Rs 10,000 during the NFO. At Rs 10 per unit, this buys 1,000 units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF.
That money sits in units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF, which holds the stocks making up the Nifty Metal Index. As the index moves, the ETF’s price should follow, and the FOF’s NAV should track the ETF, minus fees at both levels. This only illustrates the mechanism; it does not predict or imply any return.
Portfolio allocation
Instrument | Minimum | Maximum |
Units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF | 95% | 100% |
Debt securities and money market instruments | 0% | 5% |
The scheme does not invest in derivatives, ADRs, GDRs, foreign securities, securitised debt, short selling, or credit default swaps. The debt sleeve exists purely for liquidity.
Investment strategy
Because this FOF is built on a passive ETF, its strategy centres on tracking, cost stacking, and liquidity rather than security selection.
Tracking difference and tracking error matter more than stock picking here. The ETF may not always mirror the index exactly, due to fees, corporate actions, cash drag, and index changes. Under normal conditions the KIM expects tracking error not to exceed 2% a year, though this can widen during rebalancing or market stress.
Cost stacking defines this structure. Investors bear two layers of expenses: the FOF’s own charges, and the expense ratio already inside the underlying ETF. Rules cap the FOF’s additional charge at twice the ETF’s weighted average expense ratio, subject to an overall base expense ratio ceiling of 0.90% a year.
FOF units are bought and sold only through the AMC at NAV, unlike the ETF, which also trades intraday on the exchanges. That makes SIPs simpler, but investors give up exchange side, real time pricing.
Potential benefits
Potential benefit | Why it matters |
SIP access to metal sector exposure | Start a SIP through the usual mutual fund route, no demat account needed |
Single sector exposure | Targeted access to steel, aluminium, copper and other metal companies via one index |
Rule based construction | Index tracking removes discretionary stock selection at both levels |
No direct ETF trades needed | The FOF handles the ETF purchase internally once units are allotted |
Key risks
Risk | What it means |
Market risk | Returns depend on the Nifty Metal Index; metal and mining stocks can be volatile |
Concentration risk | Limited to one sector, so it lacks broad market diversification |
Tracking error and difference | The ETF, and in turn the FOF, may not exactly replicate index returns |
Liquidity risk | Redemption may take longer during unusual market stress or large outflows |
Who may consider this fund?
Investor type | Why it may fit |
Investors with a diversified core portfolio | Can use this as a satellite allocation to the metal theme |
SIP investors without a demat account | Get index linked metal exposure without placing ETF trades |
Investors comfortable with Very High risk | Sector concentration demands higher risk tolerance |
Long term investors | Metal sector cycles run for years, not months |
Who may not find it suitable?
Investor type | Why it may not fit |
Investors seeking capital protection | Very High riskometer, no capital protection features |
Investors wanting broad diversification | Concentrated in one sector, not a substitute for a core holding |
Investors with a short horizon | Exit load within 15 days; sector cycles run over years |
Investors uncomfortable with dual costs | Pays for both the underlying ETF and the FOF wrapper |
Comparison with traditional investment options
Feature | Fixed Deposit | Debt Mutual Fund | Hybrid Fund | Equity Mutual Fund | HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF |
Risk | Low | Low to Moderate | Moderate to High | High | Very High |
Return potential | Fixed | Market linked, modest | Market linked, moderate | Market linked, higher | Tied to one sector index |
Volatility | Minimal | Low | Moderate | High | High, sector concentrated |
Liquidity | Limited, early withdrawal penalty | High | High | High | High, subject to exit load |
Horizon | Short to medium | Short to medium | Medium to long | Long | Long |
Suitable investor | Capital protection seekers | Conservative debt investors | Investors wanting a blend | Diversified equity investors | Investors wanting metal sector exposure |
This table is for factual comparison only and does not rank one product above another.
HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF Review by Zenith Finserve
HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF serves one purpose: giving mutual fund investors index linked access to India’s metal and mining sector without a demat account.
It wraps the HDFC Nifty Metal ETF inside a fund of fund structure, a mechanical decision rather than an investment call on metals itself.
The Very High riskometer and single sector design mean this fits as a satellite allocation for investors who already hold a diversified core portfolio, not as a first mutual fund holding. A goal horizon of five years or more, with no near term liquidity need, suits the cyclical nature of metal stocks better than a short holding period.
Before applying, weigh the dual layer of costs, the tracking error the KIM flags as a possibility, and whether a single sector theme fits your existing allocation.
This is a factual overview, not a recommendation to invest. For a broader look at how mutual funds fit into a financial plan, see Zenith’s comprehensive guide to mutual funds in India or Zenith’s Mutual Funds Advisory service.
How Zenith Financial Management can help
At Zenith Financial Management, we follow a process driven investment planning framework. We assess your goals, cash flows, risk profile, time horizon, existing investments, loans and tax situation before suggesting investments.
We align our investment suggestions with your financial objectives and review them periodically to keep them suitable as your circumstances change.
Similar NFOs on Zenith Finserve
Zenith has not yet published coverage of another sector focused metal, mining, or commodity ETF fund of fund, so there is no genuinely comparable article to link here. For related recent reading, see Zenith’s coverage of the Axis Nifty50 Equal Weight Index Fund NFO, another passive, index tracking launch, and the TRUSTMF Large & Mid Cap Fund NFO.
Frequently asked questions
What is HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF?
An open ended fund of fund from HDFC Mutual Fund that invests in units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF, which tracks the Nifty Metal Index (TRI).
When does the NFO open and close?
It opens on 20 July 2026 and closes on 3 August 2026.
What is the minimum investment?
Rs 100, for both lumpsum and SIP, and any amount thereafter.
Is HDFC Nifty Metal ETF FOF NFO good to invest in?
Depends on your goals and horizon. It is a single sector, Very High risk scheme, better suited as a satellite holding than a core one.
What does the fund invest in?
95 to 100 percent in units of HDFC Nifty Metal ETF, up to 5 percent in debt instruments for liquidity.
What is the exit load?
1% if redeemed within 15 days of allotment; nil after.
Does it pay dividends or IDCW?
No. It offers a Growth option only.
Who are the fund managers?
Ms. Nandita Menezes and Mr. Arun Agarwal.
What is the benchmark?
The Nifty Metal Index (TRI).
Does this fund need a demat account?
No. As a fund of fund, units are applied for and held like any regular mutual fund scheme.
What is the risk level?
Both the scheme and benchmark are rated Very High, reflecting metal sector concentration.
How is this different from investing in the ETF directly?
The ETF trades on exchanges and needs a demat account; the FOF is bought and sold at NAV, with an extra layer of expenses.


