Wednesday, July 28, 2010

SEBI proposes change in PMS fee model

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has proposed that portfolio management service (PMS) firms should charge profit sharing/performance related fees on the basis of high water mark principle.

In a consultative paper issued on July 27, the market regulator said that once the portfolio rises to a certain peak and the portfolio manager charges fee for it, the next time he could charge a fee only if the portfolio value is above the previous peak.

For example, consider that frequency of charging performance fees is annual. A client’s initial contribution is Rs 10,00,000, which then rises to Rs.12,00,000 in its first year, a performance fee/profit sharing would be payable on the Rs 2,00,000 return. In the next year, the base value of the portfolio becomes Rs 12,00,000 and the portfolio manager can charge fee only if the portfolio rises above Rs 12,00,000. If in the second year, the portfolio drops to Rs 11,00,000, no performance fee would be payable. If in the third year the Portfolio rises to Rs.13,00,000, a performance fee/profit sharing would be payable only on the Rs1,00,000 profit which is portfolio value in excess of the previously achieved high water mark of Rs 12,00,000.

For the purpose of charging performance fee, the frequency should not be less than quarterly.
In case of partial withdrawal of funds by investors, all fees and charges should be charged proportionately and the high watermark should be adjusted accordingly.

The regulator further said that in order to ensure transparency and adequate disclosure regarding fees and charges, the client agreement should contain a separate annexure that should list all fees and charges payable to the portfolio manager.

“The client is required to separately sign the annexure on fees and charges and add in his own handwriting that he has understood the charge structure,” SEBI said.
Head of the PMS group of a mutual fund house said on the condition of anonymity that it is good step towards bringing more clarity on the issue of fee. “Investors would certainly benefit if there is more clarity on such issues,” he added.

Source: http://new.valueresearchonline.com/story/h2_storyView.asp?str=101395

Fund managers' reaction to RBI rate hike

RBI has raised key rates by up to 50 bps. Check out what the fund managers have to say.

Navneet Munot, chief investment officer, SBI Mutual Fund

The rate hikes underscore the strong demand in the economy. The investment cycle is showing strong signs of picking up, as there are capacity constraints in most sectors. Going forward, investment will be a bigger driver of growth than consumption.

Krishna Sanghavi, head of equities, Kotak Mahindra AMC

There is no doubt about the growth in the economy. And the rate hikes were very much in line with expectations. But from a stock perspective, the more crucial issue is whether the growth in corporate earnings will meet market expectations.

Anoop Bhaskar, head-equity, UTI Mutual Fund

The rate hikes don’t change our view on (shares of) interest rate-sensitive sectors. In India, demand for consumer loans is influenced more by availability, rather than cost of funds. As long as income visibility is good, there will be strong demand for retail loans

Anand Shah, head-equities, Canara Robeco AMC

The message from the RBI to banks is clear: be less aggressive in lending. Banks with a better CASA ratio and strong branch network will benefit in a scenario, where cost of funds increases. At the same time, NBFCs could be adversely hit.

Vetri Subramanium, head-equity, Funds Religare AMC

The monetary policy clearly signals that RBI is more worried about containing inflation at the moment. We expect more rate hikes — 75-100 bps — over the next nine months. The net interest margin of banks could shrink due to flattening of the yield curve

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/policy/Fund-managers-reaction-to-RBI-rate-hike/articleshow/6225237.cms

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