Most investors tend to only look at the Point-to-Point (P2P) trailing returns of a ULIP fund or mutual fund, and some tend to incorrectly focus more on which have been the top-performing funds over the past year especially—while choosing their fund investment. The problem with P2P returns is that they tend to get distorted sometimes due to significant outperformance or underperformance in one or two years. Therefore, there may be a time period bias due to that. To take an example - imagine Fund X, which is a large-cap fund, and has delivered a huge return of 100 per cent in 2009—when there was a strong market rally. As a result, its trailing returns over two and three years will also start looking good, due to spill-over, influencing us to choose the fund.