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Comparison

SIGS3 vs SEF2: Which Newer Siddhartha Scheme Is Built Better

By · July 6, 2026 · 6 min read · 1122 words

SIGS3 vs SEF2: Which Newer Siddhartha Scheme Is Built Better

Putting SIGS3 and SEF2 side by side on the figures that actually decide returns - NAV, price, discount, dividend, portfolio and size - so you can see which scheme the data favours today.

Head-to-head at a glance

AttributeSIGS3SEF2
Fund houseSiddhartha CapitalSiddhartha Capital
StructureClosed-EndClosed-End
NAVRs 11.61Rs 9.92
Market price (LTP)Rs 10.60n/a
Premium / discount-8.70%n/a
Expected dividend19.00%0.00%
Equity allocation90.3%n/a
Holdings48n/a
Fund sizeRs 80.58 croreRs 1.25 arba (Rs 125.0 crore)

NAV and price

On net asset value, SIGS3 is the higher of the two at Rs 11.61, versus Rs 9.92 for the other.

Dividend and yield

SIGS3 carries the higher expected distributable dividend (19.00% versus 0.00%). A higher expected yield can mean more income, but it also depends on the fund realising and distributing those gains.

Portfolio and size

SEF2 is the larger fund by paid-up size (Rs 1.25 arba (Rs 125.0 crore)).

Which one do the numbers favour?

If income is your priority, the higher expected yield is on SIGS3. Neither is a recommendation. Same-house schemes often overlap heavily in holdings, so also check how similar their portfolios are before choosing.

Where this sits in Nepal's fund market

Nepal's mutual fund industry has grown to 58 schemes run by 19 licensed fund houses, split between 44 closed-end funds that trade on NEPSE and 14 open-end funds bought and sold at NAV. For ordinary savers, a mutual fund is the simplest way into the share market: a professional manager pools money from thousands of investors and spreads it across dozens of listed companies, so you get diversification and expertise without picking stocks yourself. Across the closed-end schemes the average unit currently trades at -4.49% to NAV, and 29 of them sit at a discount - a reminder that even inside one asset class the numbers vary widely, which is exactly why comparing the underlying data matters.

The key terms, explained

If you are new to Nepali mutual funds, these are the words that do most of the work in this article:

Risks worth keeping in mind

Mutual funds are diversified, but they are not risk-free. A few things to weigh before you invest:

How to start investing in Nepali mutual funds

Getting started is more straightforward than most first-time investors expect. The practical path looks like this:

  1. Open a demat account and BOID through any depository participant (a bank or broker), then register on MeroShare - this is your gateway to holding and applying for securities online.
  2. Link a bank account for ASBA/C-ASBA so you can apply for new fund offerings and debenture issues directly from your bank.
  3. Decide your style: buy a listed closed-end scheme any trading day on NEPSE through your broker's TMS, apply for an open-end scheme at NAV, or subscribe to a systematic plan (SIP) that invests a fixed amount every month.
  4. Mind the costs and tax: factor in brokerage, and remember that dividends and capital gains are taxable in Nepal - check the current rates before you invest.

A mutual fund suits investors who want exposure to the share market without the time or expertise to pick individual stocks. Start with an amount you can leave invested, compare a handful of schemes on the numbers, and review your holdings each time the AMCs publish fresh monthly reports.

Want the latest figures, side by side for every scheme? Compare any two schemes on Nepal's Capitals - refreshed each trading day, straight from the source.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is SIGS3 or SEF2 cheaper to NAV?

Compare the live premium/discount figures in the table above.

Which pays a higher dividend, SIGS3 or SEF2?

SIGS3 has the higher expected distributable dividend.

Can I hold both schemes?

Yes. Just remember that funds from the same house often own many of the same stocks, so holding both may give you less diversification than it looks.

Where does this comparison data come from?

All figures are sourced from AMC disclosures and SEBON filings and recomputed each trading day on Nepal's Capitals - no third-party aggregators.

Is a discount to NAV always better?

Not necessarily. A discount can reflect low liquidity or an approaching maturity as easily as a bargain - treat it as one input, not a signal on its own.

Keeping the data honest

Every figure in this article is origin-only: Nepal's Capitals tracks all 58 schemes across 19 licensed fund houses and recomputes each number every trading day, drawing NAV and allocations from each AMC's own monthly reports, market prices from the live NEPSE feed, and issue data from SEBON filings. There are no third-party aggregators in the pipeline and nothing is dressed up as official that isn't - so what you read here reflects the most recent primary-source disclosure. Because those disclosures update on a schedule, the picture can shift quickly when fresh NAVs and prices land; bookmark the live dashboard and check back before you act on any single number.

SK
Written bySandeep Kumar Chaudharyhttps://sandeepkumarchaudhary.com/

Disclaimer. This article is informational and is not investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Every figure is sourced from primary AMC disclosures and SEBON filings and is recomputed each trading day. Confirm the latest numbers before acting.