Saturday, 28 July 2012

YOUR RISK PROFILE

FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN MAKE YOUR RISK PROFILE WORK FOR YOU 


 Imagine this: On the first day of your swimming lessons, you were told to jump in the deep end of a massive pool. What would your reaction be?? You’d probably be scared out of your wits. Obviously you are inexperienced, and you are still a long way from becoming an expert; hence the risk of diving into the pool is very high. On the other hand, if you told an ace swimmer to do the same, it would probably be child’s play for him. He is experienced and for him the stakes are very low. Just like swimming, in stock investing one size does not fit all. We all know that we need to invest in stocks to beat inflation and earn great returns. But most of us are scared to invest, because of the risk involved. Also, the amount of risk each person can actually take depends on many factors like his age, income, past experiences etc. Hence, each individual’s risk appetite is unique and this risk appetite must be the determining factor for the kind of stocks that he should invest in. Stock investing, much like batting, is a game of different strokes for different folks that depend on an individual’s risk appetite and profile. The risk profile of a person is an inherent characteristic which determines the type of investment options you should invest in. It depends on 2 factors i.e. Risk taking ability and your willingness. Just to give you an example if a 55 year retired person, in need of a steady income invested in small-cap stocks, it would leave him in a rude shock. By investing in small caps he would be taking on way more risk than his ability. Thus, it is only once you know your risk profile that you should decide on your investment plan. And this risk profile should be a function of both i.e. the amount of risk you are able to take based on your age, income, responsibilities and your willingness to take risk based on your past experiences etc. This risk profile will determine the proportion of money you should invest in equity and non-equity. Taking the above example forward, the retired person’s ability to take on risk will be low, based on his age, his income etc. Hence he should ideally have a small portion of his investments in equity (around 10-20%). Also, this portion should mainly be in Nifty or large-cap stocks (i.e. safe stocks), that assure good returns with relatively lower risk. Similarly, if you tell a 25 year old who has just started earning good money to put all of his money in a fixed deposit; it will do him no good. He has age on his side, has a good income and there are chances he will be more willing to take on risk as his other responsibilities may be less. In such a case the ideal scenario for him would be to have a larger proportion of his investments in equity rather than put it in a bank FD. Also, he can take the risk of investing a good chunk of his equity portfolio in mid-caps and small caps (high risk high return stocks). So as you can see, knowing your risk profile is the first and the most critical step to investing in stocks. It helps determine your proportion of investments in equity and also within the equity portfolio what kind of stocks to invest in (i.e. large-cap, mid-cap or small cap). To help you do this, MoneyWorks4me.com has launched a unique tool called the Equity Game Plan. This tool analyses your risk profile and gives you a suggested allocation of the kind of stocks best suited to your risk profile. As investors we always have many questions in mind while investing in stocks – How much risk should I take with my stock investments? What is the ideal equity portfolio for me taking my risk appetite into consideration? The Equity Game Plan gives you the answers to these very questions. a) It helps you discover your risk profile (based on your ability and willingness to take risk) and gives you an insightful analysis about how averse or comfortable you are to take risk. b) It gives you the best-suited investment strategy based on your risk profile. (for example whether your strategy of investing should be ‘Conservative’ or ‘Aggressive’. c) It gives you the asset collection and the equity game plan best suited for you. For example what proportion you should invest in equity and a segregation of your equity portfolio with safe stocks like large-caps or the riskier ones like mid-caps and small-caps.

STOCK INVESTING

THE BELOW MENTIONED TIP WILL BE VERY USEFUL FOR THOSE WHO ARE INVESTING IN STOCKS Have you ever wondered why your friends earned money by investing in stocks but u did not, especially since you both invested in the same stocks? This is a thought that bothers many of us, doesn’t it? The answer is very simple – Stock Investing is a game of different strokes for different folks. And this style depends on your risk profile i.e. the amount of risk that you can take on while investing in stocks. One style may work for your friend and help him earn great returns, but the same style may leave you in losses. Hence, the first and the most critical step while investing in stocks is to know your risk profile and then decide on what kind of stocks you can invest in.

Sunday, 15 July 2012

This has happened Many a times to each of us - that we invest in a good stocks and the price falls further soon after we buy, because of market irrationalities; and there are times when we sell a stock and the stock price zoom up, after we sell. Thus, it is the Right Timing that finally determines whether your BUY/SELL Decision is right or not

Saturday, 24 March 2012

MF 10%RULE FOR INVESTMENT

10%RULE FOR MF]

5 Sebi rules that limit risks in MF schemes
Market risks are omnipresent in an MF, but strong regulations keep your fund manager in check
Statutory warnings, such as the one that mutual funds (MF) issue (“mutual fund investments are subject to market risk, please read the offer document carefully”) get monotonous. After a while they stop registering and you move right now without paying much heed to them. But risk is the middle name of any MF scheme; you can neither avoid it, nor ignore it and it helps to know that beyond these words there is a strong regulatory grid.
The capital market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), has over the years strengthened the MF regulations to ensure that your risks get limited. Market risks are omnipresent in an MF, but strong regulations keep your fund manager in check. Here are five such rules.
Diversification through the 10% rule
It’s essential that your fund diversifies across scrips so that one unusual fall in a single scrip doesn’t take your entire fund down. Sebi rules say that your MF scheme cannot invest more than 10% in a single scrip. Sectoral schemes and index funds are, however, exempted from this rule. Since sectoral schemes invest in a single sector, like an information technology fund, there are limited scrips to choose from.
Rajeev Thakkar, chief executive officer, Parag Parikh Financial Advisory Services, says: “This makes sense for diversified funds. And 10% limitation isn’t bad at all. Even if a scheme has invested 9% each in about 12-13 scrips, it still becomes a very concentrated portfolio.”
Dhirendra Kumar, chief executive officer, Value Research, an MF tracking firm, reminds quickly that despite the 10% restriction, fund houses enjoy flexibility. “Debt funds can invest up to 100% in government securities because they come with the government’s backing,” says Kumar, adding that though fund houses cannot invest more than 10% in a single scrip, this rule is only to be implemented at the time of investments. If the value of the scrips rises later, MFs are not obliged to sell them.
Diversification through the minimum number of investors rule
Just like you need to diversify your holdings, your MF scheme must also diversify its investor base. As per Sebi rules, every MF scheme is supposed to have at least 20 investors and no single investor is supposed to invest above 25% of the scheme’s corpus. This is to ensure that no single investor holds a large chunk of your scheme. Reason being, when such an investor withdraws, your fund may need to sell the shares or debt securities of its most liquid companies to meet this large redemption. Those who continue to stay invested would then be left with lemons.
Every MF scheme is supposed to check the daily holdings of investors, who own at least 25% of the scheme’s corpus. At the end of every quarter, it takes a daily average of such large holdings to check if any investor has breached the 25% limit on a quarterly basis. The MF—and thereby the large investor—then gets a month’s time to rebalance the portfolio. If s/he fails to take any action, the fund house then gives such investors a 15-day notice period to redeem his excess holdings (above 25% of the scheme’s corpus), failing which the excess holdings get automatically redeemed.
These days fund houses are more proactive; they try and ensure that they don’t accept large amounts. “Large investors are sensitized and the marketing and sales teams are always on the alert. They usually alert large investors when they feel the limit could be breached,” says R. Sivakumar, head (fixed income and products), Axis Asset Management Co. Ltd.
In whose trust your money lies
One of the reasons why investors got lured by—and lost money in—the plantation scam between 1996 and 2002 (and for many more years after that in few other similar schemes) was that investors gave cheques directly to the plantation schemes.
However, when you write a cheque to a mutual fund, you write it in the name of the scheme that is a part of—and where your money goes to is—a trust. This trust is governed under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 and is guarded by the trustees. The people who manage this money on your behalf are fund managers, who work in a separate company called the asset management company (AMC), which is governed by the Indian Companies Act, 1956.
The trustees have a fiduciary responsibility to ensure that your money is managed in the right manner. “While the AMC looks after the business side of the mutual fund, the trustees look after compliance and whether or not the AMC follows regulations when managing investor’s money,” says Shariq Contractor, partner, Contractor, Nayak & Kishnadwala Chartered Accountants and a trustee at BNP Paribas Trustee India Pvt. Ltd, the trustee company of BNP Paribas Asset Management India Ltd. Contractor claims that fund houses must be in regular touch with their trustees to ensure compliance, especially if it needs to deal with tricky issues. During the 2008 credit crisis that affected markets the world over, including India, when investors made a rush for panic redemptions, most fund houses had to take a call on whether they should make a distress sale of their underlying securities (selling securities at throwaway prices and incurring losses that is mostly passed on to the investors) to meet redemptions or to borrow money. Contractor claims that that was a tricky decision when the fund houses had to go back to their trustees to take their opinion. “When we take a decision, it goes right to the top management sitting outside India,” says Contractor.
Good broker, bad broker
Every time your MF buys or sells securities, its broker—who facilitates this transaction—earns a commission. To ensure that your broker doesn’t unfairly earn commissions on your behalf, Sebi has specified that your MF should not buy or sell more than 5% of the aggregate purchases and sales by the mutual fund through any single broker. The 5% limit is for any block of three months. If the MF breaches this limit, it needs to justify to its trustees why the limit was breached. However, your fund house cannot breach this limit if the broker is a sister firm and/or associated with the fund house or its sponsor. In 2006, the Supreme Court upheld Sebi’s order against the erstwhile Shriram Mutual Fund in a case pertaining to the years 1998 and 1999, where Sebi found, through an investigation, that the MF had bought and sold shares through its affiliate brokers in 12 instances over six quarters. Sebi had imposed a penalty of Rs. 5 lakh for this violation. sponsor.
“This is a very serious violation and Sebi takes it very seriously,” says Jimmy Patel, chief executive officer, Quantum Asset Management Co. Ltd. Although Sebi hasn’t specified norms on mutual funds on how to empanel brokers, fund houses are required to make a list of its reasons and the due diligence they do for empanelling. Your trustees get to look at them and voice objections if they feel your fund house hasn’t done its due diligence, adequately.
Tough to do front-running
In June 2010, Sebi accused HDFC Asset Management Co. Ltd, one of India’s largest fund houses, of front-running. This is a corrupt practice that is frowned upon in the securities market. Front-running means that a trader of an entity, say a mutual fund, enters into a stock market and buys a large quantity of shares just a few moments before the mutual fund itself buys the same securities. When the fund house buys this stock, the price moves sharply typically because it buys in large quantities. The broker then sells his holdings thereby profiting from the sharp rise in prices. Front-running can also be done when the mutual fund sells its securities.
Similarly, insider trading is a practice, whereby a person knowingly buys or sells securities after being privy to information that is not publicly disclosed or in other words, inside information.
Sebi doesn’t like it and is known to take action when it catches fund houses doing that. In 2001, Sebi issued a detailed circular that specified the processes that your fund house as well all its employees should undertake whenever any employee buys or sells any security from the stock market. For instance, whenever an employee buys or sell any share, he has to first make a written application with the fund house’s compliance office. If the fund house holds the share in any of its schemes, then there is a “cooling-off period” of 15 days. In other words, the fund house should not have bought or sold that within 15 days prior to the application date. Once the employee buys or sells this stock, he must report to the compliance within seven days. Note that the compliance officer’s approval—if it comes—is valid only for 10 days. Also, Sebi has said that employees cannot profit within 60 calendar days from the date at which the employee buys.
Mint Money take
MFs are risky instruments and do not offer guaranteed returns. But once you make your allocation to traditional fixed-income instruments, it makes sense to gradually invest in MFs as they are one of the better regulated financial instruments and offer better tax-adjusted returns.


5 Sebi rules that limit risks in MF schemes
Market risks are omnipresent in an MF, but strong regulations keep your fund manager in check
Statutory warnings, such as the one that mutual funds (MF) issue (“mutual fund investments are subject to market risk, please read the offer document carefully”) get monotonous. After a while they stop registering and you move right now without paying much heed to them. But risk is the middle name of any MF scheme; you can neither avoid it, nor ignore it and it helps to know that beyond these words there is a strong regulatory grid.
The capital market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), has over the years strengthened the MF regulations to ensure that your risks get limited. Market risks are omnipresent in an MF, but strong regulations keep your fund manager in check. Here are five such rules.
Diversification through the 10% rule
It’s essential that your fund diversifies across scrips so that one unusual fall in a single scrip doesn’t take your entire fund down. Sebi rules say that your MF scheme cannot invest more than 10% in a single scrip. Sectoral schemes and index funds are, however, exempted from this rule. Since sectoral schemes invest in a single sector, like an information technology fund, there are limited scrips to choose from.
Rajeev Thakkar, chief executive officer, Parag Parikh Financial Advisory Services, says: “This makes sense for diversified funds. And 10% limitation isn’t bad at all. Even if a scheme has invested 9% each in about 12-13 scrips, it still becomes a very concentrated portfolio.”
Dhirendra Kumar, chief executive officer, Value Research, an MF tracking firm, reminds quickly that despite the 10% restriction, fund houses enjoy flexibility. “Debt funds can invest up to 100% in government securities because they come with the government’s backing,” says Kumar, adding that though fund houses cannot invest more than 10% in a single scrip, this rule is only to be implemented at the time of investments. If the value of the scrips rises later, MFs are not obliged to sell them.
Diversification through the minimum number of investors rule
Just like you need to diversify your holdings, your MF scheme must also diversify its investor base. As per Sebi rules, every MF scheme is supposed to have at least 20 investors and no single investor is supposed to invest above 25% of the scheme’s corpus. This is to ensure that no single investor holds a large chunk of your scheme. Reason being, when such an investor withdraws, your fund may need to sell the shares or debt securities of its most liquid companies to meet this large redemption. Those who continue to stay invested would then be left with lemons.
Every MF scheme is supposed to check the daily holdings of investors, who own at least 25% of the scheme’s corpus. At the end of every quarter, it takes a daily average of such large holdings to check if any investor has breached the 25% limit on a quarterly basis. The MF—and thereby the large investor—then gets a month’s time to rebalance the portfolio. If s/he fails to take any action, the fund house then gives such investors a 15-day notice period to redeem his excess holdings (above 25% of the scheme’s corpus), failing which the excess holdings get automatically redeemed.
These days fund houses are more proactive; they try and ensure that they don’t accept large amounts. “Large investors are sensitized and the marketing and sales teams are always on the alert. They usually alert large investors when they feel the limit could be breached,” says R. Sivakumar, head (fixed income and products), Axis Asset Management Co. Ltd.
In whose trust your money lies
One of the reasons why investors got lured by—and lost money in—the plantation scam between 1996 and 2002 (and for many more years after that in few other similar schemes) was that investors gave cheques directly to the plantation schemes.
However, when you write a cheque to a mutual fund, you write it in the name of the scheme that is a part of—and where your money goes to is—a trust. This trust is governed under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 and is guarded by the trustees. The people who manage this money on your behalf are fund managers, who work in a separate company called the asset management company (AMC), which is governed by the Indian Companies Act, 1956.
The trustees have a fiduciary responsibility to ensure that your money is managed in the right manner. “While the AMC looks after the business side of the mutual fund, the trustees look after compliance and whether or not the AMC follows regulations when managing investor’s money,” says Shariq Contractor, partner, Contractor, Nayak & Kishnadwala Chartered Accountants and a trustee at BNP Paribas Trustee India Pvt. Ltd, the trustee company of BNP Paribas Asset Management India Ltd. Contractor claims that fund houses must be in regular touch with their trustees to ensure compliance, especially if it needs to deal with tricky issues. During the 2008 credit crisis that affected markets the world over, including India, when investors made a rush for panic redemptions, most fund houses had to take a call on whether they should make a distress sale of their underlying securities (selling securities at throwaway prices and incurring losses that is mostly passed on to the investors) to meet redemptions or to borrow money. Contractor claims that that was a tricky decision when the fund houses had to go back to their trustees to take their opinion. “When we take a decision, it goes right to the top management sitting outside India,” says Contractor.
Good broker, bad broker
Every time your MF buys or sells securities, its broker—who facilitates this transaction—earns a commission. To ensure that your broker doesn’t unfairly earn commissions on your behalf, Sebi has specified that your MF should not buy or sell more than 5% of the aggregate purchases and sales by the mutual fund through any single broker. The 5% limit is for any block of three months. If the MF breaches this limit, it needs to justify to its trustees why the limit was breached. However, your fund house cannot breach this limit if the broker is a sister firm and/or associated with the fund house or its sponsor. In 2006, the Supreme Court upheld Sebi’s order against the erstwhile Shriram Mutual Fund in a case pertaining to the years 1998 and 1999, where Sebi found, through an investigation, that the MF had bought and sold shares through its affiliate brokers in 12 instances over six quarters. Sebi had imposed a penalty of Rs. 5 lakh for this violation. sponsor.
“This is a very serious violation and Sebi takes it very seriously,” says Jimmy Patel, chief executive officer, Quantum Asset Management Co. Ltd. Although Sebi hasn’t specified norms on mutual funds on how to empanel brokers, fund houses are required to make a list of its reasons and the due diligence they do for empanelling. Your trustees get to look at them and voice objections if they feel your fund house hasn’t done its due diligence, adequately.
Tough to do front-running
In June 2010, Sebi accused HDFC Asset Management Co. Ltd, one of India’s largest fund houses, of front-running. This is a corrupt practice that is frowned upon in the securities market. Front-running means that a trader of an entity, say a mutual fund, enters into a stock market and buys a large quantity of shares just a few moments before the mutual fund itself buys the same securities. When the fund house buys this stock, the price moves sharply typically because it buys in large quantities. The broker then sells his holdings thereby profiting from the sharp rise in prices. Front-running can also be done when the mutual fund sells its securities.
Similarly, insider trading is a practice, whereby a person knowingly buys or sells securities after being privy to information that is not publicly disclosed or in other words, inside information.
Sebi doesn’t like it and is known to take action when it catches fund houses doing that. In 2001, Sebi issued a detailed circular that specified the processes that your fund house as well all its employees should undertake whenever any employee buys or sells any security from the stock market. For instance, whenever an employee buys or sell any share, he has to first make a written application with the fund house’s compliance office. If the fund house holds the share in any of its schemes, then there is a “cooling-off period” of 15 days. In other words, the fund house should not have bought or sold that within 15 days prior to the application date. Once the employee buys or sells this stock, he must report to the compliance within seven days. Note that the compliance officer’s approval—if it comes—is valid only for 10 days. Also, Sebi has said that employees cannot profit within 60 calendar days from the date at which the employee buys.
Mint Money take
MFs are risky instruments and do not offer guaranteed returns. But once you make your allocation to traditional fixed-income instruments, it makes sense to gradually invest in MFs as they are one of the better regulated financial instruments and offer better tax-adjusted returns.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

THE CRR RATIO

• It is a bank regulation that sets the minimum reserves each bank must hold byway of customer deposits and notes.

• These deposits are designed to satisfy each withdrawal demands of customers.

• Deposits are normally in the form of currency stored in a bank vault or with the Central bank like RBI.

• CRR is also called the liquidity ratio as it seeks to control money supply in the economy.

• CRR is used as a tool in monetary policy, in influencing the country’s economy, borrowing and interest rates.

• CRR works like brakes on the economy’s money supply.

• CRR requirements effect the potential of the banking system to create higher or lower money supply.

• For example say…the CRR is pegged by RBI at 10%... If a bank receives RS 1000 as deposit then they can lend Rs.900/-as a loan and will have to keep a balance of Rs.100/- in the customers deposit account.

• Now a borrower who received Rs.900/- as a loan will deposit the same in his bank.

• The borrower bank will now lend out Rs.810/- and keep Rs.90/- in his deposit account.

• As this process continues, the banking system can expand the initial deposit of Rs.1000/- into a maximum of Rs.10000/- ( Rs.1000+Rs.900+Rs.810...= Rs.10000).

• The higher the CRR ratio the lower the money available for lending.

• This reduces the credit expansion by controlling the amount of money that goes out by way of loans.

• This directly effects money creation process and in turn effects economic activity.

• CRR is increased to bring down inflation which happens due to excessive spending power.
• Spending

• Spending power is augmented by loans-If the money goes out s loans is controlled, inflation can be tamed to some extent.

• A lower CRR allows the bank to lend more money and will fuel consumption and spending.

• Conversely, if the government wants to stimulate higher economic activity and encourage higher spending to achieve economic growth, they will lower CRR.

• Thus banks indirectly enjoy the power to create more money

ALL ABOUT JRGONS


 We live in a word that is rapidly changing and evolving . However, in this change one  truth remains constant.  That is the need to save money and deploy it in a manner which help us earn adequate returns linked to the risk we wish to take. As we start examining and studying this discipline of savings and deployment and return , we are often confronted with terms and ‘jargons’ we don’t understand.       
                                                                                                                                                                     
The science of finance is  littered with terms like ‘hedging,fiscal deficit, indexation’ etc. To many of us the ring of these words  produces alien sounds. This attempt is from the desire to make life simpler for those  individuals  who wishes to explore the world of finance on his/her own. 

Saturday, 21 January 2012

RISING COST OF EDUCATION


BASICS OF CHILD PLANS
The worry that tops the list for a parent is, “how to meet the rising cost of education?” You start saving for your children quite early. You plan and save to be able to deal with the costs of higher education or to make their life financially secure till the time they become independent. A child insurance plan is an important step in the direction. Child plans are designed in a manner that you are able to provide financial support to the child at crucial stages in their life.
Maturity of child plans generally coincides with specific stage in the life of a child like going for a professional course or higher education, stepping into a new career or marriage. These stages are typical at the age of 18 years, 21 years or 24 years. For you, these are occasions when you might need extra funds to manage the situation comfortably. So, planning for child insurance also gives you a peep into your own future financial requirements over the time as the child grows. Buying a child plan is an important decision where you need to consider a lot of factors.
Consider before you buy:
• Payer benefit and waiver of premium 
Premium waiver in a child plan implies that if the parent does not survive the policy term, all future premiums will be waived off and the policy will still remain in force. The child will get all the maturity benefits as planned. Many companies have Premium Waiver inbuilt in the child insurance policy, whereas others offer it as riders. It is always better to include payer benefit or premium waiver in the child insurance policy. 
• Allocation Charge 
Allocation charge is the amount deducted by the insurance company from the premium before investing in various funds. It varies as per the type of fund, maximum being for equity funds, and minimum for debt funds. It reduces with the risk involved. Allocation charges may be negligible in traditional plans but more prominent in ULIPS. 
• Riders Available 
To ensure that the child plan does not lapse in case the payer does not survive the policy term, there are certain riders available with it. The most important child plan riders are payer benefit and waiver of premium. Other riders are dreaded diseases or personal accident benefit. Depending upon the insurance company and the insurance policy, these can be inbuilt, optional, or not available. It is important to select the riders carefully. 
• Guaranteed Benefit 
Guaranteed benefit is a percentage of sum assured that is guaranteed by the insurance company in addition to the maturity amount. This assured amount is given to the policyholder for the number of years the premium has been paid. It is payable at the maturity date along with the maturity amount. 
• Loyalty Addition 
Loyalty addition is an additional amount declared from time to time. It is a percentage of the sum assured and is in addition to the guaranteed benefit. It largely depends upon the performance of the insurance company. It is calculated on the number of years that the premium has been paid for. The percentage of additions varies every year.