You would be wondering, returns is what we invest for; so why ignore that. What needs to be appreciated here is that an investment in a vehicle, for example, a mutual fund, is not an investment ‘in’ the vehicle itself but ‘through’ the vehicle. Ultimately, it is the underlying market, with all the volatility and uncertainty, where your investments will reach. A market may be relatively more or less volatile. For instance, equity is more volatile than debt. The fund manager’s skills may make a difference, but only so much. Then what should you look at? Performance data over a long period; a period that is long enough to cover multiple market cycles. When you look at performance of a fund or a category of funds over a relatively short period of time, which is in a market cycle such as a bull phase or a bear phase, the data is distorted.