Thursday, October 8, 2009

Canara Robeco MF announces change

Canara Robeco Mutual Fund has decided to rename the scheme "Canara Robeco CIGO" to Canara Robeco Monthly Income Plan" and to convert the existing dividend option of the scheme into monthly dividend option. The changes will be effective from 8 October 2009.

Canara Robeco CIGO has the investment objective to generate income by investing in debt instruments, money market instruments and small portion in equity.

Fund houses fail to cash in on market boom

Launch 14 schemes compared with 19 during the recent slump.
Considering over 100 per cent price appreciation in the secondary market since March 9 this year, mutual fund (MF) houses have failed to cash in on the boom as they launched only 14 equity schemes to mobilise Rs 3,841 crore. Surprisingly, in a down market, fund houses had launched 19 equity schemes between April and August 2008 and mobilised Rs 2,489 crore.
The Securities and Exchange board of India’s (Sebi) order banning entry load and another order asking fund houses to differentiate new schemes from the existing ones acted as a barrier. After the Sebi order, distributors were reluctant to sell new fund schemes, while fund houses avoided relaunching of schemes, said Surajit Misra, national head (mutual fund), Bajaj Capital.
The participation of retail investors in new schemes was much lower this time as compared to the boom period of 2007 when they invested huge sums in both initial public offers (IPOs) and new fund offers (NFOs), Misra added. Retail investors seem to have changed their investment strategy by shifting focus from equity funds to IPOs or investing directly through the secondary market.
With a buoyant secondary market, 11 IPOs have hit the capital market this year so far and they have received tremendous response from retail investors. These investors applied for shares worth of Rs 11,327 crore and ,in turn, were allotted shares worth Rs 3,925 crore. The IPOs from NHPC (Rs 6,570 crore), Adani Power (Rs 2,518 crore) and Oil India (Rs 1,275 crore) were well received by retail investors, while the remaining eight received application worth of Rs 983 crore.
Sundeep Sikka, chief executive officer, Reliance Mutual Fund, said retail investors have become more selective now. Now, they check the track record and brand name of a fund house and look at the kind of product before investing. New and innovative products would definitely attract retail investors. Timing of the fund launch is also very important, Reliance Infrastructure fund was new and innovative theme and it were launched at the right time because of that it attracted large number of investors and able to moped up Rs 2,300 crore.
In the past, fund houses were getting good response for NFOs. In March 2005, when the Sensex was around the 7,000 level, 8 new schemes raised Rs 7,016 crore. In March 2006, Rs 10,228 crore was raised by 12 schemes when the Sensex moved above the 10,000 level. In January 2008, when markets hit an all-time high, 6 new schemes raised Rs 9,000 crore.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

FMC divided over allowing gold ETF trading on SEs

It is the most hassle-free route for retail investors to take an exposure to the yellow metal. But just as the gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) were gaining in popularity, a tricky question has risen as to who should be regulating them, and whether gold ETFs should be allowed to be traded on the stock exchanges, as they are being now.

According to people familiar with the development, the consumer affairs ministry has posed this question to the law ministry, since the underlying for gold ETFs is a commodity, and should logically fall under the purview of the forward markets commission (FMC).

The law ministry had asked for FMC's inputs on the matter and the commission submitted its views past month. An official at FMC told ET that once the Forward Contract Regulation Act amendment bill is passed in Parliament, products like gold ETFs will become a part of the commodity markets, and will be regulated by FMC. But even before that, opinion within FMC is divided on whether gold ETFs should be allowed to be traded on stock exchanges. Some officials see this as an encroachment on the commodity market, while others argue that since gold ETFs are a spot instrument launched by mutual funds, there is nothing wrong in them being traded on the stock exchanges and being regulated by SEBI.
NCDEX chief economist Madan Sabnavis feels that logically since the underlying is a commodity, gold ETFs should fall under the purview of FMC. He added if such funds are launched in other commodities like soy oil there could be issues pertaining to prices, which FMC would be best placed to address.

Gold ETFs are gaining acceptance, but the products is yet to reach the popularity of mutual fund products. A total of six fund houses - Benchmark Asset Management Co, Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund, UTI Asset Management Co, Reliance Capital Asset Management, Quantum MF and SBI Mutual Fund - at present offer gold ETFs in India.

According to data by the Association of Mutual Funds of India, assets under management (AUM) by gold ETF have risen 30% over the past one year to Rs 904 crore as on August 31, 2009.
Though gold collections under ETFs are growing, they remain minuscule when compared with India's gold imports of about 700 tonne annually.

Surge in equity fund offers in September

Nearly a dozen equity-based fund offer documents were filed with the Securities and Exchange Board of India during September, according to the regulator’s Web site.

This sudden spurt in the number of fund offers is despite the equity funds turning less attractive for distributors to sell after the scrapping of the entry load.

According to the Value Research data, three fund offer documents were filed with the regulator in July, four in August, while 11 of them have been filed in September. Of these 11, two are gold-based funds.
With the equity market on the upswing, mutual funds expect revival of g retail interest in the coming months, said the Taurus Mutual Fund Chief Executive Officer, Mr Waqar Naqvi.

Another attraction for retail investors is the Rs 10 face value for the new funds. For the existing funds, investors might have to pay the market price, which is higher, said fund managers.
The current environment is conducive for equity investments, fund managers said.

Mutual funds are dependent on market conditions when it comes to pushing their schemes, said a fund manager with a foreign fund house. Now, with markets in a bullish phase, it is easier to convince investors about equity products, he added.

Also, the previous rally of the Sensex, when it touched the 17,000 mark, was a very sharp rally and not many investors were able to ride that rally, said another fund manager.

Now, with the market momentum still in the upswing, analysts feel that investors would want to ride the next rally. The benchmark index Sensex rose by almost nine per cent in September.

While new fund houses would launch more plain vanilla funds , existing fund houses could go in for more of theme-based and more structured equity offerings, said Ms Lakshmi Iyer, Head of Products at Kotak AMC.

Even as there is a general positive feeling about the equity market, a section of fund managers feels that investors are still sceptical about investing at such high levels.

“The market is already at a peak and these levels may seem high for retail investors,” a fund manager said. Also the market has already priced in growth for the next 6-8 months, and there is not much scope for an uptrend for some time, he added.

Bank funds lead Indian mutual fund gainers in Sept

*Bank funds gain an average 15.8 pct vs 9.3 pct in BSE index *Diversified funds lag on lower gains from cap goods, FMCG
*Debt funds jump 0.75 pct as federal bond yields drop 25 bps
Indian funds investing in bank stocks recorded the sharpest jump in net values in September as shares of financial firms rose on prospects of better corporate results and hopes the credit growth would start ticking up.
Banking sector mutual funds gained an average 15.8 percent during the month, outperforming the 9.3 percent rise in India's benchmark 30-share index .BSESN, data from global fund tracker Lipper, a Thomson Reuters company, showed.
"If you are betting that the Indian economy will do well despite the global meltdown... this is the sector which will obviously outperform," J. Venkatesan, a fund manager at Sundaram BNP Paribas Asset Management, said.
"Valuation comfort is much more better here than any other sector," Venkatesan added.
He said most state-run banks were available at a reasonable 1.5 times their price to book value, while returns on equity were about 18 percent and improving.
Indian firms will start releasing their quarterly results from the second week of October, and advance tax payments indicate robust profits.
That should ease pressure on likely bad loans for banking firms and also boost prospects for credit off-take as corporates return to health and revive expansion plans.
Top lender State Bank of India climbed little over a quarter in September to 2,195.70, its highest close since February last year, as investors expected strong corporate earnings to boost the bank's profits and ease bad debt worries.
No. 2 lender ICICI Bank rose 21 percent to 904.80 rupees during the month, its highest close since May 21, 2008.
Actively managed diversified equity funds, the biggest category of stock funds by number and assets, recorded a 7.2 percent return, underperforming the main share index.
More tha 90 percent of them underperformed the benchmark index on lower returns from their large exposure in sectors such as capital goods, consumers and energy as well as exposure to small and mid-cap stocks.
The three sectors collectively controlled about a third of the equity investments of diversified funds at the end of August, data from fund tracker ICRA Online showed.

BOND, GOLD FUNDS

Indian fixed income funds investing in government securities recorded a 0.75 percent jump in net values in September as federal bond yields IN069019G=CC dropped 25 basis points. The prospect of an increase in the hold-to-maturity (HTM) limit for banks had supported prices in September on a view it would enable banks to buy more bonds and help the market better absorb the government's record borrowing programme in 2009/10.
The government plans to sell 1.23 trillion rupees of bonds in the second half of the fiscal year after raising 2.95 trillion rupees in the first half.
Gold exchange traded funds gained 3.4 percent during the month as the yellow metal rose primarily due to a weak dollar overseas, which spurred buying in the alternative investment.
Gold futures on the continuation chart MAUc1 ended September at 15,703 rupees per 10 grams, up 3.8 percent during the month.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Market still trending up; domestic consumption sectors good: SBI Mutual Fund

SBI Mutual Fund’s Jayesh Shroff in a chat with ET Now this morning explained that he still doesn’t feel that the markets have reached a bubble stage. His fund is very aggressive on the domestic consumption space and within infrastructure on the power space.

Do you believe that markets are fairly valued and that it was time to start booking just that little bit of profit?
The market is still trending up and in any trending market, market would usually trade above the fair valuation zone. So, the market never trades at equilibrium. On the upside it will always trade above the fair value and on the downside it will trade below the fair value. I think it is normal maybe and another thing that I feel is that the analyst community is behind the curve in terms of upgrades and we will see maybe few upgrades coming in post the results that will be declared this month and to that extent may provide a further fillip to the market.

Is there hint of a liquidity led bubble in the Indian markets, do you think that is a possibility at all?
It could be a possibility but it is just not a possibility in a very-very near future. So I think we still can’t say that we have reached a bubble stage and where you need to worry too much about excessive flow of money into the equity markets either from the domestic or overseas investors.

What could be the spaces that investors could look out for say maybe the next three to six-month time frame?
We as a fund house are extremely bullish on the domestic consumption space and maybe that would include food and food products, entertainment and so on. That is one space or one theme that we are playing very aggressively and I am also playing it in the funds that I manage very aggressively.
The entire cement exposure of the BK Birla Group eventually at some point in the future might actually be consolidated into one company. Do you think that is a potential possibility in the future and would you be positioning your own portfolios to see some value unlocking, value building when that eventually happens?
The promoter group has that decision to take and we do not have any clues to that. I think stock specific we would generally not discuss, but, in this case it is a diversified company which offers value in lot of the businesses it has apart from the real estate that it has, so I think for us and sum of parts make more sense. We have never looked at whether the cement business is going to get merged with some other company or not.
In the last one month have you been sellers in Indian equities?
No, we have not been sellers in Indian equities and at the best we would have actually deployed money because of the inflows that we would have received and I think the market is as I said earlier is trending up and would likely to, I mean is likely to remain buoyant for maybe at least in the extreme short term.

Your portfolio seems to have a positive bias towards the capital goods space based on the top ten holdings. What are the views on that space and the current valuations?
With the kind of demographic change that the country is going through and will continue to go through over next 15-20 years, the future of Indian economy and to that of extent Indian equities is extremely bright. Within that, as I said, the best play on of course this demographic change is the domestic consumption sector and that is what we are playing aggressively at this point in time. However, India is an extremely deficient country as far as infrastructure and the basic infrastructure is concerned and to that extent there is immense opportunity for players in that space to actually grow and expand.
Growth of 8% plus you are talking for a foreseeable future is not possible without development of world class infrastructure and the government definitely does not have resources and the capabilities to develop all kinds of infrastructure. So in India you have seen over the past two or three years that PPP that is the public private partnership has become a norm and has been very-very successfully implemented in lot of sectors which is a huge opportunity for infra place. Capital goods of course is one of the largest segment within the overall infra theme and primarily what we are playing here is the power sector.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Fund Primer — Equity Funds: Evaluate risk carefully

Investors often enter the equity market without understanding the risks. Such investment carries systemic risks, irrespective of whether one opts for direct exposure or through mutual funds. Here is a way to evaluate such risk.

To achieve financial goals, the first evaluation is the risk-taking capacity of the individual. People tend to take higher risks early in their career. Later on their risk-taking abilities are limited due to the lesser number of earning years.

The fewer earning years ahead limits the latter’s risk-taking ability even if the individual is very keen to achieve investment goals.

If individuals are unable to understand and assess their risk appetite, it may not be wise to hold risky assets such as equity.

Risk perception: Let us say that the risk perception of investors vary between 1 and 100 per cent. For someone in his 20s, equity may mean losing as much as 40 per cent of investments, while for his father, a 10 per cent decline could mean a high-risk strategy. This perception arises from one’s ability to tolerate risk.

Another key issue in which investors often falter is the nature of funds. Take the example of an investor who made his money in the derivatives market in 2007; this prompted him to use his father’s retirement corpus (earmarked for the investor’s sister’s wedding) in a high beta mutual fund, which fell by over 50 per cent in a downturn.

Two lessons emerge from this case: one, funds with a crucial financial goal in the near future cannot be exposed to market vagaries. Two, transfer of risk to a younger person does not automatically mitigate the risk of investing in equity.

The final step of evaluation is risk tolerance. If you cannot stomach losing money don’t barge into the equity market. If you are ready to lose at least 20-30 per cent, then you can consider mutual funds.

Risk tolerance: We come across advisors recommending MIPs to retired people as part of portfolio diversification. The advisor might know the risk profile of the investment but investor understands the risk only when he losses money.

To understand how it is possible to lose money without understanding the risk tolerance, we analysed the performance of monthly income plans (which invest about 80 per cent of the money in debt schemes and rest in equity).

The perception among individuals is that monthly income schemes declare dividends every month. Some investors enquire during market downturns why their MIPs are not declaring dividends. For instance, if an individual had invested in an MIP in January 2008, the one-year category average return of the scheme would have been minus 8 per cent.

The disparity between the best in the category and the worst was wide. The best generated a 20 per cent return in one year ending January 2009 while the worst lost 12 per cent. If you had invested in the scheme without understanding your risk tolerance and sold the units in loss in panic, your tolerance for risk was low.

Had the person stayed invested during the market correction, the fund would have once again moved to positive territory.

For instance if you look at a one-year period ending September 29, the best performing Reliance Monthly Income Plan generated a return of 30 per cent while, for the same period FT India Monthly Plan (Bonus) lost 3.5 per cent.

This shows that before investing one has to evaluate the risk-taking capacity, perception and tolerance towards risk to accumulate money in an asset class such as equity.

Change is good

Over the past few months, I have often written about the Securities & Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) regulatory moves that have been made to make the Indian mutual fund industry more investor-friendly. The elimination of investors paying for issue expenses, the reining in of maturity limits for debt funds, the perennial improvements in the transparency of fund portfolios and the most recent – the biggest change – abolishment of entry loads are some of the regulatory changes that have been undertaken to further the interests of investors.

The heart of these changes is the fact that fund industry needs to evolve with time. Sebi’s commendable quick-footedness in incorporating changes has enabled quite a bit of dissatisfaction in the way funds are run to be stemmed. A few weeks back, the Reserve Bank of India also expressed some dissatisfaction pertaining to the fund industry in its annual report. The observations made by RBI pointed towards a desire to see mutual funds being treated like banks. One suggestion that caught my eye was that the total assets managed by a fund company should be based on the number of schemes it can float.

RBI’s observations and Sebi’s numerous corrections have come from the fact that the basic premise, the original purpose, of a mutual fund – to provide professional fund management services to retail investors – has gone awry. The reason being that mutual funds are now largely used by businesses to park their short-term money. Only about 30 to 40% of the fund industry’s assets come from individual investors. The rest comes from corporates that find mutual funds more attractive, returns-wise as well as tax-wise. Given the regulatory and tax framework of our country, this doesn’t really come as a surprise. The other factor is that businesses have more money than individuals to plan and invest.

As far as mutual funds are concerned, they are in the business of managing money and hence will accept funds from wherever they come. Another reason why they end up managing more corporate money than individual money is because a large number of people are still skeptical about investing in funds. Saving habits are hard to change, and in most cases they don’t ever change. The new generation might adopt new saving methods, but the older one will look at new modes of investing only from an arm’s length. India’s centuries old saving culture will prevent this situation from changing anytime soon, but SEBI’s regulatory moves will certainly make more investors think in that direction.

While many of the changes seem to appear to be a burden on the fund industry, in the long run, they will only strengthen the business of mutual funds. Over the past year or so, these changes have definitely helped in placating individual investors and the problems that still remain are quite minor in nature. And as far as funds managing more corporate money is concerned, well, maybe that would change if bank deposits are made more attractive. The irony about this is that currently banks themselves are using mutual funds to park crores of rupees.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

'Our guiding principles will ultimately differentiate Axis from the rest'

AXIS Asset Management Company, the wholly-owned subsidiary of Axis Bank, recently got the regulator's approval to launch its funds. Axis AMC plans to draw on its strong client base of the bank to build the asset management business, says Axis AMC MD & CEO Rajiv Anand in an interview. Excerpts:
How soon do you plan to launch your funds, and how will Axis AMC distinguish itself and grow in this already crowded market?
We have received regulatory approvals for two schemes — Axis Liquid Fund and Axis Treasury Advantage Fund. And these schemes will be launched in the first week of October. Axis Bank has a presence in over 525 Indian towns through 861 branches and has over 75 lakh customers. Our gameplan is to leverage these strengths.
We want to build our business on three strong pillars, i.e., investor-oriented communication, forging long-term relationship and enduring wealth creation as opposed to just short-term opportunistic wealth creation. These guiding principles will ultimately differentiate Axis from the rest.

Is there any scope for further product innovation?
As the Indian investor evolves and our markets develop further, there will be product innovation opportunities. We are, for example, very interested in creating retail debt products, which can deliver superior tax-adjusted returns with low volatility.
Having said that, with current levels of penetration of mutual fund products in India, what we need is more innovation in communicating the benefits of the product and telling retail investors how mutual funds fulfil an investor's needs.

Do you have any plans for inorganic growth? Do you intend to bring in a foreign partner?
We are open to inorganic growth. However, the fit — especially from an investment philosophy perspective, should be right. Needless to say the price has to make sense. Currently, we have no plans to bring in a foreign partner.

What is your view on equity market? Are you comfortable with valuations after the recent run-up?
It is difficult to assess markets in the short term, more so in an environment where asset classes across the world are moving synchronously on low-opportunity cost of funds. We believe that the current low interest rate environment and relatively high growth in the Indian economy justifies current valuations. Going forward, markets should deliver returns in line with the profit growth of Indian companies.
This we believe should be in the vicinity of 15% over the next three years. We believe that corporate profits drive stock prices over the medium and long term and hence, we anticipate similar growth from equities over this period. While stock markets are no longer cheap after the sharp run-up seen in the markets, investors would do well to maintain their targeted equity allocations and benefit from this long-term appreciation opportunity.

What is your view on the interest rate scenario in India?
From a policy perspective, RBI will continue to balance growth and inflationary expectations. RBI will also have to consider expansionary fiscal policy and its impact on long-term rates. Further, global interest rates, specifically in the US, are expected to remain low for an extended period of time.
As far as the gilt curve is concerned, we believe the long-end prices factor in most of the negatives, including inflation at 6% by March 2010, fiscal issues and likelihood of monetary tightening. However, the shorter end may see some upward movement if RBI acts to remove some of the excess liquidity in the system.

Debt schemes are doing well. Do you recommend pure debt schemes or hybrid funds such as MIPs to investors?
Investors must build their portfolios based on risk assessment. What this means is that investors must understand their investment holding period and ability to take losses.
For investors with low-risk appetites, hybrid funds provide a very good option as the fixed income component cushions the volatility of equities while over long periods equities provide significant capital appreciation.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

MF assets dip as corporates pull out funds

Contrary to expectations that the revival in the equity market would have boosted the assets managed by mutual fund houses, nearly 58% of the 36 fund houses that have disclosed their average assets under management (AAUM) figures for September 2009, have seen a drop in assets compared with the previous month.
According to the data released by the Association of the Mutual Fund Industry (Amfi), the total industry AAUM for September 2009 stands at Rs 7,42,919 crore against Rs 7,49,915 crore as on August 2009, registering a decline of about 1% since the previous month. This is the second instance of a month-on-month decline in mutual fund assets in 2009 so far, the earlier one being in March.
According to the industry experts, the marginal decline is mainly on account of outflow of corporate funds from the debt and liquid schemes for making advance tax payments for the half year ended September. However, banks have continued to park in their idle funds with the mutual funds, though the proportion of the same appears to have dropped vis-à-vis the recent past.
According to the data released by the Reserve Bank of India, banks had an outstanding balance of Rs 1,56,573 crore with the mutual funds till September 11, 2009. This shows a rise of about 4% in the mutual fund investments by banks, compared with the investments worth Rs 1,51,136 crore by the end of August 2009.
But it is a grim situation where equity assets are concerned. Equity schemes have failed to register any significant growth despite rise in the equity markets and improving valuations of the existing schemes. With Sebi banning entry load with effect from August this year, distributors are not interested in selling mutual fund products due to inadequate commissions, said fund house officials.
In terms of fund house-wise growth, among India's larger and well-renowned fund houses, Reliance Mutual's AAUM rose marginally about 0.8% to Rs 1,18,251 crore and ICICI Prudential has reported an increase of about 3%. MFs managed by HDFC and UTI have, however, seen their AAUM shrink by about 4% and 0.5%, respectively, since August 2009.
Interestingly, it is the relatively smaller fund houses that have shown a healthy rise in their asset figures for the month. Fund houses like Taurus, Shinsei and JP Morgan have reported around 25% increase in their AAUM positions for the month ended September 2009, while Benchmark and Bharti AXA’s assets rose by 13% and 20%, respectively, this month.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5082916.cms

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Valuations may be high, but India growth story is secure, feel FIIs

Indian markets are looking expensive and the continued inflows are being driven more by a desire to avoid underperformance rather than conviction in the fundamental story, say some of the leading foreign institutional investors (FIIs) invested in the India equities market.
After having net sold shares worth $8 billion in 2008, foreign investors have mopped up close to $12 billion worth of equities so far in 2009.
“Valuations are expensive (18 times FY10 earnings), relative to the rest of the world. But India’s growth story is more secure than many other countries. And there is a lot of liquidity in the world chasing growth. As such, institutional investors believe that the earnings growth and GDP are strong enough to sustain these valuations,” says Jyotivardhan Jaipuria, MD and Head-Research of BoA Merrill Lynch.
India has long been touted as being at an advantage, given that its growth is less co-related to that of the global economy. And with central banks around the world pumping in liquidity to kick-start their respective economies, the stock of money in the system has shot up drastically. With no return on deposits in any part of the world, there is a lot of money chasing the few growth economies.
But there are those who believe that this in itself calls for investors to exercise caution. “There is an element of risk in that if the newsflow is not as good as expected, the market may react adversely. The market needs pause to allow valuations to catch up with earnings growth. In the long term, this is good for markets,” added Mr Jaipuria. Sandeep Kothari, portfolio manager at Fidelity Mutual Fund is positive on the market but like most of his peers, is concerned about valuations.
“The economic cycle is turning and the business is strengthening. The question is how much markets have run up and what is in the price and what is not. One is worried you could see a last phase of frenzy like you saw in 2007. We are yet to see that kind of retail participation,” he added.
FIIs maintain that flows are unlikely to slow down till such time central banks start pulling back the stimulus money. There is a perception that markets are likely to surrender some of their recent gains before long. However, the general perception is that it is likely to be a gradual decline.
Whatever the case maybe, the recent upsurge has seen the Sensex overshoot most of the fair value targets set by foreign brokerage houses. While Citi had set a 15400 target for the Sensex, Deutsche Equities target was over 16000. “Our fair value Sensex target for the year is 16500. However, liquidity and high levels of risk appetite could lead the market to overshoot our fair value target in the short term. India remains a highly attractive market from a long-term perspective, offering a structural growth story,” said Abhay Laijawala, head of research, Deutsche Equities India.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

NSE, BSE may join hands for mutual fund trading

The proposed online portal will help investors buy and sell mutual fund units and get onsolidated statements

A working group of the Association of Mutual Funds in India, or Amfi, has recommended that India’s two largest bourses, along with other firms, jointly build a transaction platform for mutual funds trading in India.
The group has suggested jointly engaging three consortia that have bid to build the platform: National Stock Exchange and National Securities Depository Ltd; Bombay Stock Exchange and Central Depository Services Ltd; and registrars Karvy Computershare Ltd and Computer Age Management Services Ltd.
“We have recommended an open architecture where strengths of all three consortia will be leveraged for the benefit of the mutual fund industry,” said Jaideep Bhattacharya, who heads the Amfi committee and is chief marketing officer of UTI Asset Management Co. Ltd.
The committee, which submitted this proposal to Amfi last week, has also suggested that mutual fund trackers Morningstar India and rating agency Icra Ltd provide the data support for this platform.
Amfi expects the platform to go live by March.
The proposed online portal will help investors buy and sell mutual fund units and get consolidated statements. With the abolition of upfront commission, few distributors are keen on servicing small investors and the transaction platform will come in handy for them.
“We have received proposals on the operationalization of the platform. A decision will be taken in a week or two. The final clearance has to come from Sebi,” said A.P. Kurian, chairman, Amfi.
According to him, the platform would provide a better reach for the industry, higher efficiency in transactions and cost control over a long term. “Similar platforms exist in developed markets like Australia and Canada. It is our effort to bring such world-class service to our investors,” he told Mint.
Officials from the bidding companies refused to comment as the proposal is yet to be finalised. The chief executive officers of four leading asset management companies confirmed the broad structure of the proposal but refused to comment as they are not familiar with the details. “A presentation is likely to be made for the members in a couple of weeks, after which a decision will be made,” one of them said.
In a parallel move, Amfi is exploring the listing of open-ended mutual fund schemes on an exchange platform.
The system has to be tweaked in such a manner that the relevant mutual fund will be the counterparty for transactions and the registrar will have to create and extinguish units for every purchase and sale, respectively, say industry experts.

'Banks have not developed the system model to distribute third-party products'

Italy-based Pioneer Investments, which signed an asset management joint venture agreement with Bank of Baroda (BoB) last year in a major move to extend its presence in India’s mutual fund market, is set to increase its presence in 300 branches of BoB in the next year. Its CEO-Asia, Angus W Stening, puts emphasis on the need for banks to be the main distribution channel after the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) tweaked norms, in a conversation with Chandan Kishore Kant. Excerpts:

What impact would Sebi’s new norms on entry load have on the Indian mutual fund industry?
It will definitely be a catalyst for the change in the distribution dynamics. The independent financial advisors (IFAs) will always play a role for all sorts of products. This industry has been an IFA-driven market from the start. However, have we seen a change in the first two months? No, we have not.
Now the question is, will the financial advisors move away from mutual funds to deposits or life insurance products? Absolutely, they will. But will the investors stop buying mutual funds, as they have to give commissions to the advisors? No, that will not happen.

Which part of the distribution channel will have to be more active now?
It will be the banks. I think this is one regulatory change which will make banks more active in the distribution side of the business, particularly the public sector banks. How they do that and how they structure has to be seen. The banks now have to be a part of the process.

Why banks? Why not the financial advisors?
The banks are more trusted and regulated institutions. The national reach of the branch network of banks and their customer base is amazing in India.
The public sector banks, in particular, have the reach which a foreign bank may not be able to achieve. Why is there a lower penetration in distribution of mutual fund products? A concern which Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rightly pointed out in its annual report. It is because the banks have not developed the system model to distribute and the processes to manage the distribution of third-party products. And this change in norms will require that.

What’s your plan for expansion in India?
Our target is to have presence in 300 branches in the next 12 months. These will be access points for the investors to buy our products.
Clearly, we want to take that number up as time goes on. Bank of Baroda (BoB) is a good partner and has provided us access to public sector space. We need to create a distribution channel. Since July last year, we focussed on the training of staff in the Baroda branches. At the same time, we are very focused on costs. We don’t want to take a conservative approach but a measured approach.

Won’t you look for channels outside Baroda branches?
I don't have a retail chain outside Baroda and I don’t plan one for at least the next 12 months. Our focus is to support Baroda. We both feel we need to invest in our point of sales locations.
What you do in this business is develop a prototype model and replicate it around the nation. When we start to see some traction, then only can we start opening up and broadening our distribution base to non-Baroda for retail.

What portion of your asset under management comes from retail and institutions?
Currently, institutional participation is as high as 95 per cent. For the retail space, we need to have a product pipeline.

You are hugely dependent on institutions.
Absolutely, yes. I think initially in the first six months, else could we go across Rs 5,000 crore in equities? No.

Where do you see your retail participation in future?
India has not got a 50-year track record in equity investment. I will be happy to get 25 per cent of the assets from retail and 75 per cent from the institutions.

You don’t sound bullish on growth from smaller cities and towns, which is in contrast with what the local CEOs talk of.All I’m saying is that we are not there now. And, possibly could not be there, as we are very much at the beginning. Managers have to look at this for a long-term business and turn away from short-term opportunistic goals. The structural change from Sebi in terms of front-end load is going to have long-term implications.

Will you invest in the branding of your JV with BoB?
We don’t have to do a joint venture brand. Since we have a strong brand and Bank of Baroda is equally a strong brand, then why the need to invest in a third brand?


L&T Fin pays Rs 45 cr for DBS Chola AMC

L&T Finance — the financial services arm of engineering major Larsen and Toubro — announced its entry into India’s mutual fund industry on Thursday, by buying DBS Cholamandalam Asset Management for Rs 45 crore.
The buyout values DBS Cholamandalam AMC — a unit of the joint venture between the Murugappa Group and Singapore’s DBS, at 1.55% of its total assets under management of Rs 2,893 crore on August 31.
Equirus Capital was advisor to L&T Finance for the deal, while Edelweiss Capital advised DBS Chola. Industry officials said the valuation is one of the lowest among the deals in the domestic mutual fund industry in the recent years.
In June, Japan’s Nomura bought a stake in LIC Mutual Fund for a valuation of about 2.5% of the fund’s assets under management. Last year, IDFC bought Standard Chartered Bank’s asset management business for a price that worked out to 5.7% of assets under management. Both these deals were considered expensive for the buyers, as a major chunk of the assets was debt at the time of acquisition.
Some in the industry believe that the deal is expensive for L&T as well, given the asset management company’s debt-laden asset mix. DBS Cholamandalam’s total assets comprises close to Rs 253 crore in equity and the rest in debt, according to data from Morningstar India, quoting AMFI figures.
The mutual fund industry has been abuzz with talks about DBS Cholamandalam AMC being on the block since 2007, though the company has officially denied it all the while. The current valuation is just a shade of what was offered to buy the AMC in 2007, said a person, who was familiar with the talks during the last stake sale attempt in 2007.
“The promoters were asking for 8% of the assets in 2007, when assets were over Rs 5,000 crore. What was offered was 6%,” said the person, on condition of anonymity. DBS Cholamandalam officials were unavailable to comment on the matter.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/indl-goods-/-svs/engineering/LT-Fin-pays-Rs-45-cr-for-DBS-Chola-AMC/articleshow/5058414.cms

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Mutual fund agents, distributors get new Code of Conduct

Apex sectoral body AMFI has issued a fresh code of conduct for mutual fund intermediaries like agents and distributors, mandating them to disclose all commissions received from different schemes.
The revised code of conduct was issued by the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) following market regulator SEBI's circular asking the mutual fund distributors to disclose all the commissions payable to them from various schemes.
In a statement today, Sebi said all intermediaries of mutual fund companies would have to follow the code of conduct strictly.
"If any intermediary does not comply with the code of conduct, the mutual fund shall report it to AMFI and Sebi. No mutual fund shall deal with those intermediaries who do not follow code of conduct," Sebi said.
Reacting to the move, mutual fund tracking firm Value Research Online CEO Dhirendra Kumar said, "It puts onus on the Mutual Fund. Since intermediaries are not accountable to SEBI, mutual funds would have to ensure that they (intermediaries) are brought to task."
The code also requires intermediaries to adhere to guidelines issued by Sebi, highlight risk factors of each scheme, abstain from indicating or assuring returns, maintain confidentiality of all investors deals and ensure that all communications are sent on time, among others.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Sebi may segregate retail, institutional MF schemes

In a bid to protect the interests of retail investors, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is planning a clear segregation of retail and institutional schemes. Sources said Sebi might ask fund houses to create separate portfolios and net asset values (NAVs) for retail and institutional schemes.Sebi is working on the move as during the liquidity crunch of October 2008, fund managers sold the most liquid stocks in their portfolio to meet redemption pressures, leaving retail investors in a spot.
At present, although mutual funds offer both retail and institutional plans, these are separate only in the name as their portfolio and NAVs are the same. The only difference is the expense ratio, which is more for retail investors. Sources said Sebi was looking at doing away with this disparity as well.
Vineet Arora, head of products & distribution at ICICI Securities, said, “It is a welcome move. There is an obvious difference in behaviour between retail and institutional investors. Institutions tend to panic more than retail investors. Since redemption pressures are more from institutions, schemes for them will have to keep more cash, which may impact returns.”
Mutual funds charge 2-2.5 per cent from retail investors in equity schemes. The fee for institutional investors is only 0.5 per cent. The expense ratio is the percentage of a mutual fund’s net assets/corpus that goes towards meeting its expenses. The ratio covers fund management fees, marketing and selling expenses, and registrar fees. Funds with lower expenses give better returns, which is one reason why institutional schemes post better returns than retail ones. A case in point is ICICI Prudential’s Focussed Equity Fund institutional plan, which has posted 19.64 per cent returns compared with the retail plan’s figure of 18.49 per cent. There are several schemes where such a disparity exists.
Deepak Sharma, CEO, Sarthi Wealth Management Consultants, said, “The segregation is necessary after the kind of outflows witnessed in October 2008. It will ensure that retail investors are not at a disdvantage during large-scale redemptions.”
Recently, Sebi Chairman CB Bhave had expressed concern over the mutual fund industry’s over-dependence on funds from corporate houses. The Reserve Bank of India has also picked holes in the business model adopted by mutual funds. “A high dependence on corporates for funds implies a lesser role for the retail investors,” it said in its Annual Report 2008-09.
According to a Celent report, institutional investors contribute 56 per cent of the industry’s assets while retail investors account for only 37 per cent. By comparison, retail contribution in China is 70 per cent.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Following own rule while investing in equities 'suicidal'


A couple of years ago, hopes were high that a large chunk of household savings, which account for nearly two-third of all domestic savings in India, will find its way to the stock market through mutual funds, insurance companies and banks.
Investments in shares and debentures by households grew at a rate of 149% a year during FY 2005-07 as mutual funds and unit-linked insurance policies made rapid inroads in urban India. In FY08 the stock market absorbed nearly 12% of all household savings in India, up from less than 1% in FY04.

The basic rule for investment in equities is to buy securities when the equity market is falling. But every time the market crashes,retail investors rush out of the market, creating a stampede and hurting themselves so badly that many wouldn’t want to return ever. This gives equities a bad name and restricts the upside potential for retail investors.
Take the case of the market turmoil in Jan’ 08 and the free fall since then. This induced individual investors to flee to the safety of traditional investment avenues like bank deposits, insurance polices and cash and household savings in shares and debentures declined by 78% in FY09 against the average growth of 71.5% in previous three years. But actually they had missed a golden opportunity.
The Sensex had stabilised at around 8000 in November 2008 and hovered around this level till mid-March .

The signs of recovery and improved global liquidity reversed the trend in equity market to northward since mid-March ’09. The Sensex nearly doubled in less than six months. And guess what, retail investors are back in Dalal Street. The rising retail participation is evident from the rising assets under management of the equity mutual funds, which have grown from Rs 1,01,000 crore in Feb ’09 to Rs 1,81,000 crore by the end of Aug ’09.
But now, most of stocks comprising Sensex and Nifty have nearly doubled in the last six months and their valuations look stretched. Obviously, with each rise in the market, the chances of making a loss is higher than making a gain. In contrast, during the 2008 meltdown, the chances of a bottoming out was greater than a further fall.

So, if one decides to enter the equity market now, the returns are likely to be at best modest given the fact that most stocks are near their year highs while some have touched all time highs.
Then there are concerns on account of underlying inflationary pressure and a strong likelihood of a monetary tightening by the central bank. This may drag the equity markets down. If this happens, retail investors may book a loss and equities will again get a bad name.
Investors should not forget that booms and busts cycles are an integral part of equity markets and if one plays these cycles smartly, she can generate long-term wealth and prosperity. Big corrections are actually a buying opportunity.


Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Equity funds valuation up by Rs 80,000 crore in 5 months

Encouraged by the V-shape recovery in the market value of equity portfolio, the mutual fund industry has started rewarding investors with dividends.
Data compiled by the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) suggest that equity funds portfolio valuation has risen by Rs 80,000 crore in the five months between March 31, 2009 and August 31, 2009, due to a 60 per cent recovery in the benchmark indices and over 100 per cent rise in mid-cap and small cap stocks.
Dividend payout data sourced from MutualFundsIndia.com shows 71 equity-related dividend paying schemes were back in the dividend paying list in the first half of the current financial year compared to only 4 in the financial year 2008-09. Overall, 96 equity schemes have paid dividend in the first half so far compared to 42 equity schemes in the first half of the financial year 2008-09.
Among the equity funds that paid higher dividends are Franklin India prima fund (60 per cent), Birla Sun Life basic industries fund, Reliance RSF equity fund, SBI magnum sector umbrella fund and Taurus star share fund (50 per cent each) and Principal emerging blue-chip fund, Sahara banking & financial services fund and Birla Sun Life tax relief 96 fund (40 per cent each).
Prateek Agrawal, head of equity at Bharti AXA investment managers said “It is ideal to book profits and reward investors with dividend payments, especially during the current market condition which is good. Investors usually tend to stay invested longer in equity-oriented schemes, which have this discipline.”
Further, he is expecting markets to perform reasonably well in the coming days, which could give further opportunities in terms of regular profit booking and dividend distribution.
Considering favourable market conditions so far in the current fiscal, 25 fund houses have considered dividend this time compared to only 12 same period of the previous fiscal. Among this 25 fund houses, 14 fund houses skipped dividend last year between April 2008 to September 2008.
This include Baroda Pioneer, Bharti AXA, Canara Robeco, Escorts, Fortis, ING, JP Morgan, Principal, Reliance, Religare, Sahara, Tata, Sundaram BNP Paribas and Taurus mutual fund.

Monday, September 21, 2009

'We are cautiously optimistic'

The world markets are abuzz with talks of an earlier-than-expected economic revival. Yet, it makes sense to be cautiously optimistic, Bruno Leefeels Bruno Lee, regional head, wealth management, personal financial services, Asia-Pacific, HSBC. In a conversation with ET, he articulates his views on the wealth management in India and the impact of the regulatory changes on the mutual fund pricing structure. Excerpts:

Many feel that the worst is behind us. Would you agree?
There is some positive improvement in terms of economic data in the US market and Asia. Also, the fear factor has significantly reduced. But, I think we still need to be cautious as there are things that might crop up such as the unemployment situation. Overall, I would say we are cautiously optimistic.

What has been your advice to your high networth income (HNI) clients?
We feel that one should not wait till the market touches a record high to return to investing in equity. HNIs should review and rebalance their portfolios on a regular basis to ensure that they are comfortable with their exposure to risk and the changing environment. Further, to deal with volatility in the markets, diversifying into different asset classes is crucial. In India, where fixed income has been providing attractive returns, clients should have a strategy to allocate assets among equity and fixed income. Indian investors need to understand that the fixed income environment is quite attractive and the equity market is recovering. But outside India, in the US or eurozone, interest rates are low. There is a huge pool of cash sitting on the sidelines. When people’s risk appetite increases, BRIC market will attract a lot of inflow and that will push up the market to the next level.

How do you see the recent regulations on Mutual Fund (MF) pricing structure affecting the market?
Overall, MF penetration is low in India. The regulation ensures more transparency in pricing, which we support. But the other thing to be considered is the high cost of distribution. Bulk of people’s savings are still in fixed deposits, so many are not familiar with stocks/MFs. Thus, it requires a lot of education and financial planning support. Also, unlike stocks, MF is an ongoing service and maintenance cost is high for distributors. So, we are looking at pricing it correctly without sacrificing the service quality.

As a distributor of MFs, what shape is the new charge structure likely to take?
We are thinking along the direction of giving customers a choice. Some customers may do only one transaction for a one-time fee. They could be sophisticated and require relatively limited ongoing servicing. But other customers may need more frequent updates and ongoing services, for them we could charge a certain advisory fee. The charges will also depend on their needs, which are different for customers with lower investible surplus and ones with higher investible assets. We will have to look at customer needs, behaviour and requirements to design an appropriate way within the regulatory environment.
We took some time do our research on how best this could be done and are now on the verge of launching our charge structure. We want to ensure that this is a sustainable, profitable structure, otherwise, it could kill the whole distribution.

What kind of potential do you see in the wealth management space in India?
At HSBC, we are excited about opportunities in India. Some estimate the retail segment will grow at around 10% CAGR, from 900,000 in 2007, to over 1.6 million until 2013. The country has a large young population. As education is important in India, there is a need to save for the long-term — for kids’ education and retirement. We are well positioned to provide quality wealth management services to the mass-affluent segment to help fulfil their important goals in life.

Which are the markets that seem attractive at the moment?
Our quarterly global fund managers survey indicates that the relative allocation to equity market will improve during the third quarter. At the same time, within the global equity market, Asia (excluding Japan), particularly the Greater China region, will continue to attract more inflows because of the continued growth. And recently, we have seen the market reaching a relatively high level compared to March. Sensex in India has almost doubled in about six months’ time. So that is a sign that the money is flowing back into the market.

Money flows back into MFs

If the number of draft offer documents filed with Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is any measure, mutual funds (MFs) seem particularly cheerful despite stricter new rule on entry load.
Market players say AMCs are on a high, thanks to renewed retail investor interest in equity, flow of new money and maturing of fixed deposits where wary investors had parked their funds during the recent trough.
MFs’ offer documents filed with SEBI rose 32-fold between August and September 18 from a single document filed in the seven months to July, 2009. September alone saw 22 offer documents being filed.
“This has to be because of the up move witnessed in markets and improvement in the economy. Fund houses now foresee higher retail investor interest,” said Apurva Shah, VP and Head of Research — Institutional Equity, Prabhudas Liladhar.
Though it appears that the downturn is behind, figures indicate that the market rally was initially not spurred by retail participation. There was no new money flowing into the market.
“The old money had depreciated during the downturn and investors were shying away from investing. Now, with people recovering losses made during the slowdown, they are eager to participate in the rally and invest in equity and Mutual Funds,” said Gopal Agarwal, Equity Head — Mutual Fund, Mirae Asset.
“Also, high-cost fixed deposits, in which investors had parked their funds during tough market conditions, are now going to mature and would flow to mutual fund and equity market,” said Agarwal.
Shah feels that the new SEBI norm on entry load would stem the flow of old money, as distributors would not see any incentive in channelling it into mutual funds.
Indian economy is perceived as resilient, and its cyclical nature of downturn attracts foreign institutional investments, said Agarwal, adding: “Both internal and external factors are in favour of Indian economy and markets. That is why, despite stricter norms by SEBI, MFs are buoyant.”

MFs invest Rs 40,246 cr in blue-chip companies

Money managers handling mutual funds are playing it safe and betting on the top 10 stocks in the bourses, ensuring that their funds perform in line with the overall market. In fact, these blue-chip companies are attracting 28% of mutual fund investment in the equity market.
According to a Sunday ET analysis, out of the Rs 143,860 cr being invested in stocks by mutual funds, as much as Rs 40,246 cr has been invested in just 10 scrips — Reliance Industries, Oil & Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), Bharti Airtel, State Bank of India (SBI), ICICI Bank, Infosys Technologies , Larsen & Toubro (L&T ), Bharat Heavy Electricals (BHEL), Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and HDFC Bank.
Significantly, the first five have an allocation of around 18% of the total equity investment of the mutual fund industry. Also, the 10 frontline stocks have high weightage in the Sensex index. Their cumulative weightage is around 59% in the Sensex in terms of market capitalisation as on September 16.
The Sunday ET analysis was done on the basis of the data provided by Value Research India, an independent investment information provider. The figures are as on August 31.
According to Kenneth Andrade, head investments at IDFC Mutual Fund, there is a correlation between the weightage of these companies in the overall market capitalization of listed entities and the investments made by the mutual fund industry.
So far as individual holdings are concerned , Reliance Industries and ONGC attracted around 4% of the total equity investment of the mutual fund industry each. Bharti Airtel, SBI, ICICI Bank and Infosys Technologies were allocated 3% of the total amount each.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Axis MF to unveil Short Term Fund; files offer document with SEBI

Axis Mutual Fund has filed an offer document with securities and exchange board of India (SEBI) to launch Axis Short Term Fund, an open-ended debt scheme.

The new fund offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 10 per unit.

Investment objective:The scheme will endeavor to generate stable returns with a low risk strategy while maintaining liquidity through a portfolio comprising of debt and money market instruments.

Plans: The scheme offers growth and monthly dividend option. Monthly dividend option will have payout and reinvestment sub options.

Asset allocation: The scheme would invest 30-100% of asset in money market instruments and debt instruments including government securities, corporate debt, securitized debt (includes securitized debt (excluding foreign securitized debt) up to 30% of the net assets of the scheme) and other debt instruments with maturity/average maturity/residual maturity/interest rate resets less than or equal to 375 days or have put options within a period not exceeding 375 days. 0-70% in debt instruments including government securities, corporate debt, and securitized debt (includes securitized debt (excluding foreign securitized debt) up to 30% of the net assets of the scheme) and other debt instruments with maturity/average maturity/residual maturity/interest rate resets greater than 375 days. The scheme shall not invest in foreign securitized debt. Investment in derivatives will be up to 100% of the net assets of the scheme. Investment in derivatives shall be for hedging, portfolio balancing and such other purposes as maybe permitted from time to time. The scheme can invest up to 50% of net assets in foreign securities.

Minimum application amount:The minimum application amount is Rs 5,000 and in multiple of Re 1 thereafter.

Target amount:The fund seeks to collect a minimum subscription amount of Rs 10 million.
Benchmark index:The schemes performance would be benchmarked against Crisil Short Term Bond Fund Index.

Fund mangers:Sriraj Bhattacharjee and Ninad Deshpande are the fund mangers of the scheme.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

ICICI Pru MF to launch Gold ETF; files offer document with SEBI

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund has filed an offer document with securities and exchange board of India (SEBI) to launch ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund (ETF), an open-ended exchange traded fund. The new fund offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 100 each plus premium equivalent to the difference between the allotment price and the face value during the NFO.

Investment objective:
ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund seeks to provide investment returns that, before expenses, closely track the performance of domestic prices of gold derived from the LBMA AM fixing prices. However, the performance of the scheme may differ from that of the underlying gold due to tracking error.

Asset allocation:
The scheme would invest 90-100% of asset in gold bullion and instruments with gold as underlying asset. 0-10% in debt and money market instruments (including cash& cash equivalent).

Minimum application amount:
The minimum application for issue of units shall be made for a minimum of Rs 5,000 plus in multiples of Re 1 in cash (by way of demand draft and cheque) during the NFO. After the NFO, units will be created in a minimum size of 1000 gold units through Authorised Participants and Large Investors.

Target amount:
During the NFO period of the plans under the scheme, each Plan seeks to raise a minimum subscription of Rs 1 Lakh.

Benchmark index:
ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund will be benchmarked against the domestic price of gold as derived from the LBMA AM fixing prices.

Fund manager:
The scheme will be managed by Chaitanya Pande.

Govt may halve time bar for insurance IPOs

Listing lock-in may be eased to five years, Reliance Life may be the first beneficiary.
The government is likely to allow insurance companies to list after five years of operations against the 10 years prescribed at present.

The move follows a proposal from Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group’s Reliance Life Insurance, which is planning an initial public offer by March to raise resources and fund its expansion plan. Reliance Life will complete four years of operation and would have to wait for another six to meet the present stipulation. Reliance Capital had acquired AMP Sanmar in 2005, which started operations in 2002. So, the two companies put together have completed seven years.

Citing the guidelines, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (Irda) had turned down a proposal from Reliance Life to list this year and referred the case to the finance ministry. The finance ministry, in turn, had sought the law ministry’s opinion on the rules.

A ministry official said the government wanted to understand if the10-year period was the minimum stipulation or if it meant the company had to list by the time it completed 10 years of operations.

“There is one insurance company that has had discussion with the Irda on whether we will permit them to disinvest now. We said it is only the government that can reduce the tenure. Then they approached the government. The government is thinking of reducing it to five years. Therefore, they have written to us, saying we propose to make rules like this and sought our suggestions We have no particular issue,” Irda Chairman J Hari Narayan told Business Standard in an interview.

None of the private players have completed 10 years of operation, with the first licence issued to HDFC Standard Life in October 2000. If the rules are amended, of the 22 private players, at least 10 insurance companies can raise funds from the public market. Apart from Reliance and HDFC Standard Life, the list includes ICICI Prudential Life Insurance, SBI Life, Max New York Life, Kotak Mahindra Old Mutual Fund, Birla Sun Life, Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance, Metlife, ING Vysya Life Insurance Company and Tata AIG Life Insurance.

The companies would, however, be able to tap the markets only after the insurance regulator finalised its IPO guidelines, which are expected later this month. Hari Narayan said the promoters would have to reduce their stake proportionately. So, in the case of a 10 per cent dilution, the Indian partner, which has, say, a 74 per cent stake, would have to pare its holdings by 7.4 per cent, while the foreign partner’s stake would fall by 2.6 per cent.

The stipulation could, however, create complications for the foreign partner since it could lose the power to block a board resolution, which requires a minimum 26 per cent holding. The regulator is expected to address these issues in the guidelines.

Apart from the guidelines, some life insurance companies are also waiting to turn profitable to tap the markets. Barring a few players such as SBI Life, Metlife and Sahara Life, most insurance players make losses.

“Under general rules only profit making companies are allowed to go public but the Securities and Exchange Board of India has, in certain situations, allowed loss-making companies to go public but only through the book-building procedure. But it will be subject to Sebi’s guidelines,” Hari Narayan said.

Friday, September 18, 2009

IDFC Asset Allocation Fund of Fund files offer document with SEBI

IDFC Mutual Fund has filed an offer document with securities and exchange board of India (SEBI) to launch IDFC Asset Allocation Fund of Fund, an open-ended fund of fund scheme.

The new fund offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs.10 per unit.

Investment objective:
The primary investment objective of the scheme is to generate capital appreciation through investment in different mutual fund schemes based on a defined asset allocation model covering both local and offshore assets.

Plans:
The scheme will offer 3 different plans -conservative asset allocation plan (Conservative AA Plan), moderate asset allocation plan (Moderate AA Plan) and aggressive asset allocation plan (Aggressive AA plan) that will offer 3 different risk profiles for investors. Conservative AA Plan will target the lowest risk profile followed by Moderate AA Plan. Aggressive AA will be the highest risk profile asset allocation.
Each plan offers both growth option and dividend option (payout and reinvestment).

Asset allocation:
The Conservative AA Plan will invest 10-15% in equity funds, 45-50% in debt funds, 45-50% in money market funds, 0% in alternate and 0-15% in money market securities.Moderate AA Plan will invest 25-30% in equity funds, 60-70% in debt funds, 0-5% in money market funds, 5-10% in alternate and 0-15% in money market securities.Aggressive AA Plan will invest 45-50% in equity funds, 35-45% in debt funds, 0-5% in money market funds, 10-15% in alternate and 0-15% in money market securities.Alternate - It will consist of allocations to offshore commodity equity funds as well as domestic Gold ETFs.

Minimum application amount: The minimum application amount for all plans (non SIP purchases) is Rs 5,000 and in multiple of Re 1 for purchases and in multiples of Re 0.01 for switches. SIP purchase - Rs 1,000 (subject to minimum of 6 installments of Rs 1,000 each).
Target amount: The fund seeks to collect a minimum subscription amount (plan level) of Rs 10 million under the scheme during the NFO period.

Load structure: The scheme will charge no entry load. But an exit load of 0.25% of the NAV shall be applicable if investors who redeem / switch out such investments within 3 months from the date of subscription applying First in First Out basis, (including investments through SIP/STP).

Benchmark index: The schemes performance would be benchmarked against Crisil MIP Blended Index.

Fund manager: The scheme will be managed by Ashwin Patni.

Mirae Asset launches Mirae Asset China Advantage Fund

Mirae Asset Global Investments has announced the launch of India’s first Pure China Fund, Mirae Asset China Advantage Fund (MACAF), an open-ended fund of funds scheme that will invest predominantly in Mirae Asset China Sector Leader Equity Fund, a SICAV fund domiciled in Luxembourg. The fund will be open for subscription from September 14, 2009 to October 9, 2009.

The scheme seeks to generate long-term capital appreciation by investing predominantly in units of Mirae Asset China Sector Leader Equity Fund and/or units of overseas funds and units of exchange traded schemes that focus on investing 65-100% in equities and equity related securities of companies domiciled in or having their area of primary activity in China and Hong Kong. The scheme may also invest 0-35% of its corpus in debt and money market securities and/or units of debt/liquid schemes of domestic mutual funds, in order to meet liquidity requirements from time to time.

According to Mr. Arindam Ghosh, CEO, Mirae Asset Global Investments (India) Pvt. Ltd., “China is poised to lead the world out of the global slowdown backed by its domestic consumption and stimulus push from the government. We are pleased to launch Mirae Asset China Advantage Fund for the Indian investors, thereby meeting their asset allocation needs. The international fund of funds will provide investors access to one of the world’s growing economies and will enable them to prudently diversify their portfolio”.

According to Mr. Byung Ha Kim (Fund Manager for Mirae Asset China Sector Leader Equity Fund): “The Chinese economy is leading the world on the recovery path. China should maintain its high growth rates in the coming years and even in this scenario, the overall macro risk associated with the country is relatively very low. With Mirae Asset China Advantage Fund, we aim to offer an opportunity to Indian investors to benefit from the growth potential of local Chinese companies”.

The new fund offers a regular plan with dividend (payout & reinvestment) and growth options, with the minimum application amount for the regular option being Rs.5000/- and in multiples of Re.1/- thereafter. The Scheme does not guarantee or assure any returns. The fund would be benchmarked against MSCI China Index (INR terms).

IDFC MF lanuches FMP; files offer document with SEBI

IDFC Mutual Fund has filed an offer document with securities and exchange board of India (SEBI) to launch IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan (FMP) Quarterly Series 55 - 57, Half Yearly Series 9 - 11 and Nineteen months Series 2, a close-ended income scheme.

The new fund offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs10 per unit.

Investment objective:The primary investment objective of the scheme is to seek to generate income by investing in a portfolio of debt and money market instruments maturing before the maturity of the scheme. There is no assurance or guarantee that the objectives of the scheme will be realized.

Plans:
IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Quarterly Series 55 - 57 (Plan A)
IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Half Yearly Series 9 - 11 (Plan A)
IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Nineteen months Series 2 (Plan A & B)
The plans will have both growth and dividend option.

Structure: Close Ended Income scheme with 2 plans (Plan A & B) under IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Nineteen months Series 2 and one plan (Plan A) under IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Quarterly Series 55 - 57, IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - HalfYearly Series 9 - 11.

The schemes have following duration:
1) IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Quarterly Series with duration of Three Months
2) IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan - Half yearly Series with duration of Six Months
3) IDFC Fixed Maturity Plan -Nineteen Months Series with duration of Nineteen Months.

Minimum application amount:The minimum application amount for IDFC FMP - QS - 55 -57 & IDFC FMP - HS - 9-11 Plan A is Rs 25000 and multiples of Re 1and IDFC FMP - 19 mts - 2 Plan A is Rs 5000 and multiples of Re 1 and Plan B - Rs 25 lakhs and multiples of Re 1.
Asset allocation:The scheme will invest 0-100% in debt and money market. Investment in securitized debt will be up to 50% of net assets of the plan(s). Investments in derivatives, foreign securities and stock lending will be nil.

Target amount:The fund seeks to collect a minimum subscription amount of Rs 10 million under the scheme during the NFO period.

Load structure: The scheme will charge no entry and exit load.

Benchmark index:The schemes performance would be benchmarked against Crisil Composite Bond Fund Index.

Fund manager:The scheme will be managed by Anupam Joshi.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Regulator wants systems audit of mutual funds

Within two days of making a series of proposals to prevent Satyam-type accounting scams, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) today said mutual funds would need to have a systems audit conducted by an independent certified information systems auditor (CISA) or its equivalent authority.
The market regulator has advised fund houses that the audit should be conducted once in two years. For financial years 2008-2009 and 2009-2010, Sebi said the systems audit should be completed by September 30, 2010.

The domestic mutual fund industry manages assets of over 7.5 lakh crore.

“The audit should be comprehensive, encompassing systems and processes inter alia related to integration of the front-office system with the back-office system, fund accounting system for calculation of net asset values, and financial accounting and reporting systems,” said Sebi.

It added the audit would also look at “unit-holder administration and servicing systems for customer service, fund flow processes, system processes for meeting regulatory requirements, prudential investment limits and access rights to systems interface.”

Nimesh Shah, chief executive officer of ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, said, “We welcome this step and we will follow the direction as we have been given a year’s time. It is good for the industry and since the industry is in a serious business of managing people’s wealth, it is an important requirement.”

Fund CEOs that Business Standard spoke to said since new regulatory norms had come up and more players were preparing to enter the market, the systems of fund houses should be in compliance with the new regulatory norms.

Such a move would bring robustness to the industry, they said.

Sebi also asked the fund houses to place both audit and compliance reports before the trustees. These, along with the comments of the trustees, should be communicated to Sebi.

IFAST launches Fundsupermart.com in India

The company also launched an equity funds index—FSM All-Equity Fund Index, that would act as an indicator for investors and fund managers.

Financial Services firm, iFAST Financial India on Wednesday launched Fundsupermart.com in the domestic market, an online transactional website for retail mutual fund investors.
The platform will allow customers free account opening and transactions at zero cost amongst other facilities, iFAST Financial India’s managing director, Rajesh Krishnamoorthy told reporters here.
This would also provide consolidated reports to help the customers manage their holding with ease, he said.
The company also launched an equity funds index—FSM All-Equity Fund Index (Fefi), that would act as an indicator for investors and fund managers.
The composition and structure of Fefi is based on the performance of select open-ended equity funds and currently comprises 79 equity mutual funds, Krishnanmoorthy said.

Mutual funds ride on public sector IPOs

SBI Funds, Sundaram BNP Paribas Asset Management look to launch PSU-dedicated funds; more in pipeline
Mutual funds are trying to take advantage of the government’s disinvestment cycle beginning with the initial public offerings in NHPC Ltd and Oil India Ltd by launching dedicated funds to invest in public sector units (PSUs).

At least two fund houses have filed their offer documents with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), the capital market regulator, and more are in the pipeline. Even fund houses that have no immediate plans to launch dedicated PSU products say they will play the theme through investment plans.

SBI Funds Management Pvt. Ltd has filed an offer document with Sebi for a fund that will invest in public sector companies. Sundaram BNP Paribas Asset Management Co. Ltd has filed a document for Sundaram BPN Paribas Select Thematic-PSU Opportunities Fund.
Both these schemes will invest at least 65% of their portfolio in equity shares of listed PSUs. Religare Mutual fund is also planning a PSU fund, said an official from the fund house, who didn’t want to be named.

India has 36 asset management companies (AMCs), with total assets under management of Rs7.49 trillion at the end of August.

Fund managers say more schemes will be launched to play the PSU theme. The fund houses will try to garner returns by investing in stocks of state-owned companies that are either about to get listed on the exchanges or have been recently listed.

Investments during listing enhance the prospects of profit booking in the long run. After NHPC and Oil India, Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd is one of the next big public offerings.

“We are excited about the ongoing disinvestments process by the PSUs. We would not launch any PSU-dedicated equity fund at the moment, but we will try to take advantage by changing our asset allocation strategy through some of our existing equity diversified funds,” said Sundeep Sikka, chief executive officer of Reliance Capital Asset Management Ltd. The company manages assets worth Rs1.17 trillion.

Equity-oriented PSU funds have been launched only twice in the past, and both were floated by the oldest mutual fund house in the country, UTI Asset Management Co. Pvt. Ltd. The firm in 1993 launched UTI Master Growth Fund, which invested at least 50% of its assets in PSU stocks. The fund, with assets worth Rs243.25 crore, was merged with UTI Top 100 Fund last year.

The company launched another PSU-dedicated scheme called UTI PSU Fund in 2004, with assets of Rs18.09 crore, which was merged with UTI Index Select Fund in April 2007.

Traditionally, mutual funds have been the biggest buyers of PSU stocks during disinvestment. Many mutual fund experts believe PSU stocks can be the best bet for investors in the long run. This is because the government’s capital-raising strategy has changed over time. Until about two years ago, the government was considered conservative and hence, a majority of PSU shares used to be held by it.

As the markets evolved, the government is now more liberal towards disinvestment of its stakes in PSUs to raise capital. This change in tack would provide more clarity about the government’s moves, unlock the value of PSU companies and help fan positive sentiment among investors towards PSU shares. Fund managers are betting on this sentiment by launching new equity-related PSU funds.

“PSU stocks are generally available at a discount as compared with other companies. So, there is clearly an opportunity for mutual fund investments,” said Dhirendra Kumar, CEO, Value Research India Pvt. Ltd, a New-Delhi based mutual fund tracking firm.

“The businesses of PSUs are very focused and in the long run, we are very optimistic about such companies. Though the performance of PSU companies is very cyclical, in a span of three-five years, PSU stocks should outperform the markets,” he added.

According to a recent report by Prime Database, a New-Delhi-based primary market investment tracking firm, the scope for PSU IPOs is huge.

“The divestment process can begin with a bang and continue to create new milestones. With all these offerings, the shape and size of the Indian capital market will change for ever, and for good,” said Prithvi Haldea, chairman and managing director of Prime Database.

Still, there are concerns. There are 80 listed PSU firms on the Bombay Stock Exchange. In terms of year-to-date gains, the benchmark Sensex has outperformed PSU stocks. While the Sensex has risen 72.87% during the calendar year, the PSU index has managed a gain of 66.45%.

Some fund managers are sceptical about the launch of dedicated PSU equity funds, saying a limited universe of asset allocation among PSU firms could crimp returns.

“We will not launch any thematic PSU fund at the moment, since the opportunity in the space is limited. Even with more PSU companies getting listed, we will rather prefer to watch how the market evolves. But we may invest in PSU companies through some of our existing schemes,” said Jaideep Bhattacharya, chief marketing officer, UTI Asset Management, which manages Rs73,926 crore of assets.

Another risk, according to N. Sethuram, chief investment officer of Shinsei Asset Management (India) Pvt. Ltd, is that PSUs are not an all-weather investment. “Themes need to be useful across time bands. We need to see how far they are useful,” he said. “PSUs tend to perform in line with the government. The performance is subject to the government of the day and policy risks.”

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

U.S. Economy May See Its Slowest Recovery Since 1945

The U.S. recovery may be the slowest since World War II to regain all the ground lost during the recession, even if economists’ more optimistic forecasts for expansion turn out to be right.

The slump this time was so deep, said JPMorgan Chase & Co. chief economist Bruce Kasman, that the 3.5 percent average quarterly growth rate he sees in the next year won’t be enough to bring gross domestic product back to its $13.42 trillion pre- crisis peak. That’s in contrast with the last 10 recoveries, when GDP returned to its previous levels within 12 months.
The result: A year after the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy helped drive GDP down to an annualized $12.89 trillion in the second quarter, there’s still “plenty of malaise,” Kasman said. Unemployment may remain close to the current 26-year high of 9.7 percent through 2010, upsetting voters ahead of mid-term Congressional elections and forcing officials to keep interest rates near zero and the budget deficit around this year’s record $1.6 trillion.

“This will be the most disappointing recovery,” said Kasman, whose forecast compares with the median estimate of 2.5 percent growth in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

The U.S. might not recover the 6.9 million jobs and the $13.9 trillion in wealth lost during the recession until about the middle of the decade, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. The unemployment rate may never get back down to the 4.4 percent low of 2007, he said.

Cyclical Revival
Stock prices may take three or four years to reach their previous highs as the cyclical revival of the economy gradually boosts corporate profits, said Allen Sinai, chief economist at consulting group Decision Economics in New York.

“It will be a bull market, but not a roaring bull market,” Sinai said. He sees the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index rising to 1,100 by the end of 2009 from its close of 1,042.73 on Sept. 11. The index hit a record 1,565.15 on Oct, 9, 2007, and then fell to a 12-year low of 676.53 on March 9, 2009.

Companies, particularly retailers such as Macy’s Inc., may have to adjust as consumers buy less. Household spending as a share of GDP might fall to its long-run historical average of 65 percent from 70 percent in the past decade as people opt to save more, according to economists Peter Berezin and Alex Kelston, of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Biggest Drop

The restrained performance that is forecast for the economy reflects both the depth and the origins of the recession, which began in December 2007. The 3.9 percent decline in gross domestic product was the most since World War II.

While Nippon Yusen K.K., Japan’s largest shipping line, has been able to raise rates on container services to the U.S., it continues to lose money on the business. Mikitoshi Kai, head of investor relations for the Tokyo-based company, said in an interview that “we need to increase rates by a lot more to make a profit.”

The decline has been a “balance-sheet recession,” says Richard Koo, chief economist at Tokyo-based Nomura Research Institute. Those take time to recover from, as once highly leveraged banks and consumers gradually reduce their debt, he said.

Fed Outlook

Policy makers may have to keep interest rates low and the federal budget deficit high to push the economy forward as financial institutions and households adjust. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his fellow central-bank colleagues might hold their target for the federal funds rate between zero and 0.25 percent through 2010, said Kasman at JPMorgan in New York, the second-largest U.S. bank. That’s the rate at which commercial banks lend each other money overnight.

“The Fed may need to maintain fairly low interest rates over a period of many years,” Berezin and Kelston, of New York- based Goldman, the fifth-biggest U.S. bank, wrote in a Sept. 9 report.
On the fiscal front, the deficit will total $1.29 trillion in the year starting Oct. 1, boosted by a $787 billion stimulus package and aid to banks, according to Maury Harris, chief economist in New York at UBS Securities, a unit of Zurich-based investment bank UBS AG.

“I suspect the deficit will continue to balloon for years,” said Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

‘Wild Card’

The “wild card” is the political impact the economy’s chronic difficulties will have on mid-term Congressional elections in November 2010 and beyond, Kasman said.

Democratic lawmakers in the House of Representatives are particularly vulnerable if voters blame President Barack Obama for a sour economy, said Nathan Gonzales, political editor for the Rothenberg Political Report in Washington.

Since 1945, the party that controls the White House has lost an average of 16 House seats in a president’s first midterm election, according to the Cook Political Report. Obama’s Democratic Party currently has 256 seats in the chamber, compared with 178 for the Republicans.

In the past, deep recessions have often been followed by rapid recoveries. That’s what happened in 1982-83 as the economy surpassed its previous peak in about six months, thanks to a 7.2 percent surge in growth. Behind the turnaround: aggressive monetary easing by the Fed, which brought short-term interest rates down to 8.5 percent from 15 percent in 1982.

No ‘Gas’

“We thought that if we really stepped on the gas, the economy would take off, and it did,” said Lyle Gramley, a senior economic adviser for New York-based Soleil Securities who was a member of the Fed’s board at the time. That option isn’t available to the central bank now as the overnight interbank rate is at zero.

The Fed has also been hampered by a credit crunch that has restricted the flow of money from lenders to borrowers, Gramley said. Banks, faced with mounting credit losses, have tightened terms and standards on loans to businesses and households since the middle of 2007, according to the Fed’s tri-monthly survey of lending officers.

That’s akin to the situation in 1991-92, when tight credit in the wake of the savings-and-loan crisis restrained the recovery, according to Gramley. It took about nine months for the economy to return to pre-recession production levels as growth clocked in at an average 2 percent.

Borrowing Falls

Household borrowing fell by a record $21.6 billion in July to $2.5 trillion, the Fed reported on Sept. 9. The drop was the sixth straight monthly decline, the longest since the 1991 credit crunch.

Behind the fall: Banks are becoming stingier in handing out credit while consumers are growing more wary of taking on more debt. The savings rate rose to a 14-year high of 6 percent in May before falling to 4.2 percent in July, government data show. It was 1.3 percent at the start of 2008.

Retailers are taking notice of the increased consumer thriftiness, including Cincinnati-based Macy’s. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Terry Lundgren told Bloomberg Television on Sept. 8 that the second-largest U.S. department-store company has reduced inventories “fairly significantly.”

Home builders may have to adjust, too. Sales of new houses jumped 9.6 percent in July, the most since February 2005, to a 433,000 annual pace. That was still less than half the 923,000 average since the start of 2000.

The increase in sales has helped boost the price of copper. Copper for delivery in three months closed Sept. 11 at $6,250 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. That compares with $3,231 on Jan. 2 and a high of $8,730 in April of last year.

“There were huge excesses built up during the expansion,” Sinai said. “It may take the economy a few years to get back to its previous peak.”