Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A primer on FMPs

In a rising interest rate regime, fixed maturity plans can offer good returns. But exit in the interim is difficult because of listing.

When interest rates start going up, investors seek options that will give them good returns. There are various options – fixed deposits, debt funds, corporate deposits, non convertible debentures and fixed maturity plans (FMPs) of mutual funds.

FMPs are schemes with a pre-specified tenure. The basic objective is to generate steady returns over a fixed period. Thus, investors are assured of returns if they stay in these products for the entire period.

Since these products are of different maturities, investors have the option of buying schemes that suit their requirements. Since these schemes are closed-ended in nature, investors earlier had to pay an exit load. However, last year, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) made it mandatory for FMPs to be listed in the stock exchanges.

At best, these schemes can be best equated with a fixed deposit in a bank, but with a caveat. The maturity amount of a fixed deposit in a bank is 'guaranteed', but only 'indicative' in case of an FMP.

Last year, Sebi issued a directive whereby fund houses were instructed not to declare any ‘indicative portfolio’ and ‘indicative returns’ to investors in FMPs. However, while buying it, one can look at the returns that are being offered at a particular time.

But what investment strategy do these FMPs follow? These are invested in fixed income instruments, like certificate of deposits (CD), commercial papers (CP), money market instruments, corporate bonds; debentures of reputed companies or in securities issued by Government of India and fixed deposits selected by the fund manager.

These have lower risk of capital loss due to their investment in debt and money market instruments and are least exposed to interest rate risk as the fund holds the instruments till maturity getting a fixed rate of return. Here, fund managers primarily invest in AAA, P1+ or such kind of good rated credit instruments with maturity profile of the securities in line with the maturity of the plan so there is also low credit risk with minimal liquidity risk involved.

Since the instrument is held till maturity, there is a cost saving in respect of buying and selling of instruments.

FMPs have better tax efficiencies whether you invest in the short term or in the long term. The long-term capital gains (investment of more than a year) enjoy indexation benefit (Indexation is a technique to adjust income payments by means of a price Index , in order to maintain the purchasing power of the public after inflation).

Importantly, if you stay invested for just over a year, there are double indexation benefits. For instance, if you buy an FMP of 14 months in February 2010, scheme will mature in April, 2011. In this case, the investor will get inflation indexation benefits for the years 2009-10 and 2011-12. After that, the tax rate is 10 per cent without indexation and 20 per cent with indexation.

In case of short-term capital tax, it is similar to interest income from bank fixed deposits. The returns are added to the income of the investor and taxed as per his/her slab.

However, remember that these schemes are not-so liquid anymore. Since they have to be listed at the stock exchanges, exiting before the scheme matures is difficult. For one, there are few buyers. And even if there are buyers, the units have to be sold at a discount. As a result, enter these products only if you are sure that

Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?autono=387057

DSP BlackRock FMP - 13 M - Series 2 Floats On

DSP BlackRock Mutual Fund has launched a new fund named as DSP BlackRock FMP - 13 M - Series 2, a close ended income scheme. The New Fund Offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 10 per unit. The new issue will be open for subscription from 2 March and close on 9 March 2010.

The primary investment objective of the scheme is to seek capital appreciation by investing in a portfolio of debt and money market securities. It is envisaged that the scheme will invest only in such securities which mature on or before the date of maturity of the scheme. The scheme may also use fixed income derivatives for hedging and portfolio balancing.

The duration of the scheme is 13 months from the date of allotment.

The scheme offers two options viz. growth and dividend payout option.

The scheme will allocate up to 100% of assets in debt securities with medium risk profile. It would further invest up to 100% of assets in money market instruments with low to medium risk profile. Debt instruments may include securitized debts up to 100% of the net assets and fixed income derivatives up to 100% of the net assets.

The minimum application amount is Rs 10000 and in multiples of Rs 10 thereafter.

The fund seeks to collect a minimum subscription (minimum target) amount of Rs 10 crore under the scheme during the NFO period.

Entry load and exit load charge will be nil for the scheme. Units of the scheme will be listed on the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE).

Benchmark Index for the scheme is CRISIL Liquid Fund Index.

Source: http://profit.ndtv.com/2010/03/01113655/DSP-BlackRock-FMP--13-M--Ser.html

SBI Debt Fund Series - 15 Months Fund - 5 Floats On

SBI Mutual Fund has launched a new fund named as SBI Debt Fund Series - 15 Months Fund - 5, a close ended debt scheme. The New Fund Offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 10 per unit. The new issue will be open for subscription from 2 March and close on 8 March 2010.

The investment objective of the scheme is to provide regular income, liquidity and returns to the investors through investments in a portfolio comprising of debt instruments such as Government Securities, PSU & Corporate Bonds and Money Market Instruments maturing on or before the maturity of the scheme.

The scheme offers two options viz. growth and dividend payout option.

The scheme will invest in Government of India dated Securities and Treasury Bills, PSU & Corporate Bonds/Debt Instruments. Investment in Money Market instruments would be up to 100%. Exposure to securitized debt may be to the extent of 40% of the net assets.

The minimum application amount is Rs 5000 and in multiples of Rs 1 thereafter.

Entry load and exit load charge will be nil for the scheme.

Benchmark Index for the scheme is CRISIL Short Term Bond Fund Index.

Source: http://profit.ndtv.com/2010/03/01145655/SBI-Debt-Fund-Series--15-Mont.html

Sensible MF investing not about following events

On the day of the Union Budget, in the hours after the Budget speech was over, I was engaged in a very interesting exercise in estimating the impact of the budget on various mutual funds. Value Research was conducting this exercise for this newspaper and you must have seen the results in the shape of a full-page feature on these pages on Friday the 27th. The idea was to select a representative sample of funds from across different categories which would be impacted by the Budget.

When the Budget came out, the process turned out to be more complex than we had estimated it would. It wasn't as if the Budget would not have any impact on any funds-far from it. The stock markets certainly didn't think so, and nor did the bond markets.

What made the exercise more complex than I'd expected was the selection of a set of mutual funds that would be impacted more than others. The slope of the impact wasn't flat, but it was very broad. To my mind, this reveals something about how this budget; about how the Budget process has evolved; and most importantly, about the process of choosing good mutual fund investments. The time when the Union Budget could make or break individual companies or whole sectors of the economy are long gone. There were companies that will be found to have done better as a result of something that the Budget did and there would be mutual funds that would do better. But these would not be a direct impact of something Mr. Mukherjee said. The budget would create conditions that some businesses would be able to exploit better than others. Similarly, there would be some investment managers who would understand these differentials better than others and thereby make more money, but that is a secondary impact. There would be other business leaders and investment managers who would take the same inputs and not be able to create the same outputs.

What I'm saying is that basically, there is no longer a Budget impact so much as businesses which use the conditions created to make an impact. This leaves the investors in an interesting position. There is a type of investing that needs to understand the impact of the Budget instantly but that's the type that involves making a trade at 11:30 a.m. and reversing it at 3 p.m. investing is not even the right word to use for that activity. On a more tempered time-scale, specially for mutual fund investors, benefiting from the impact of the Budget-this budget, or any other-is more about sticking to the same core values that one would do anyway. Sensible and goal-oriented mutual fund investing is not about following fashions and events. It's about sticking to a small number of funds which are genuinely diversified and are not limited to any sector or theme or situation. It's also about investing gradually and not trying to time the market or a particular event. And it's about businesses that benefit from the general growth and prosperity over years and decades.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/personal-finance/mutual-funds/analysis/Sensible-MF-investing-not-about-following-events/articleshow/5629575.cms

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