From the turn of the century, the industry has been growing at 20 per cent per annum. And it is estimated that in the coming years, Indian banks are expected to grow at 35 per cent per annum.
In a growing economy, this sector is a direct beneficiary. What's even better is that its net non-performing assets (NPAs) have come down considerably from 8 (in the year 2000) to 1 per cent today.
To fund this growth, banks would need funding to the tune of $14 billion. This is one of the reasons the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is opening up the sector to foreign players next year. From 2009 onwards, foreign banks would be allowed to acquire up to 74 per cent of any Indian bank.
The domestic players will benefit from the essential capital and expertise while the foreigners would get a foothold into this lucrative sector (for new players) and have the ability to reach a larger audience (for the existing ones).
In recent times there has been considerable investment by international banks like Citigroup, HSBC, Bank of America and Deutsche Bank to scale up their operations in India. Moreover, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) are also betting on this sector. As many as five public sector banks (PSB) have exhausted their limit of FII investment, with three more along with four private sector banks in the caution zone.
The only way out for FIIs is to now tap the banking exchange traded funds (ETFs) and sector funds focussed on the banking sector. This could explain why in the past 12 months the average monthly growth in the units of equity banking funds has been around 24 per cent.
At present, there are three open-ended equity banking funds in the market, while another two should be available for investment soon. Four more are still in the approval stage. But each of the existing three have their own character, the similarity begins and ends with the common sector.
Their investment strategy, market cap preference, choice of scrips and type of stocks vary. And these banking sector funds don't have a mandate limited to pure banking players. Financial institutions and brokerage stocks also find a place here.
While we look at the three equity funds in our analysis, there are also three ETFs available for investment. Like its cousins in the equity category, the Banking BeES, the largest ETF has rewarded its investors by giving a return of 36 per cent since inception.
So if none of the equity funds appeal to you, you could even look at this option. All said and done, this sector deserves a presence in any portfolio.
JM FINANCIAL SECTOR FUND – UP AND DOWN
The newest entrant to the pack got itself noticed in the very first year of its existence. Though it trounced the competition in 2007, its performance was not consistent all the year through. And while investors celebrated with a 95 per cent return in 2007, in the March 2008 quarter they had to grapple with negative returns of 33.36 per cent.
It can be argued that the fall was the logical outcome of the entire sector plummeting and the market going downhill, but JM Financial fell harder than its peers (Reliance fell by just 22.26 per cent).
This fund has always been very bullish on ICICI Bank. Soon after launch, this scrip cornered 32.49 per cent of the portfolio. It is the only stock in the portfolio that has been there continually since launch. Even now, it is the top-most holding at 11.57 per cent.
The fund manager chases growth so momentum stocks like Reliance Capital, Indian Infoline and Srei Infrastructure are more favoured than stocks like Bank of Baroda, Corporation Bank and Federal Bank which are prominent in the portfolios of the other two funds. It has more or less avoided public sector banking stocks like Maharashtra Bank, Jammu & Kashmir Bank and South Indian Bank.
Though the fund manager continuously held on to stocks like ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, Yes Bank, IDFC, PFC and Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services for fairly long periods of time, it does not indicate that he adheres to the buy-and-hold strategy. He has entered and exited stocks like Axis Bank, Bank of India, IDBI, Karnataka Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and
Reliance Capital only to once again get into them at a later date. Of course, the small size of the fund has given the fund manager the leeway to be a nimble player.
This investing style of chasing growth and selling once a price objective has been achieved, only to re-enter later, is typical of fund manager Sandeep Neema.
But what's also typical is that when his fund outperforms, it is streets ahead of the competition, but when it does not, it falls much lower than its peers. If you are considering this fund, get mentally prepared to ride the ups and downs.
RELIANCE BANKING FUND – STEADY RETURNS OVER TIME
As the oldest and largest banking sector fund, it has not disappointed investors. Over the past five years, it has delivered an annual return of 42 per cent. Historically too, this fund has been less volatile than its peers or its underlying index.
Despite being a good performer, the fund took second place to JM Financial in 2007. In the December 2007 quarter, Reliance Banking delivered 19.43 per cent as against 28.52 per cent of JM Financial. But in the following quarter (March 2008), Reliance Banking fell by just 22.26 per cent, as against JM Financial's fall of 33.36 per cent.
The reason was two-fold. Reliance Banking stayed away from high PE stocks — Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, Yes Bank, Cholamandalam DBS Finance and Srei Infrastructure. As a result it lagged in 2007 but fell much less when the market tanked.
Reliance Banking's high cash component also proved to be a buffer when the market fell. Like all the sector funds from Reliance AMC, this one too has the leeway to go fully into cash, should the need arise.
While it has not exercised that option, it does have the tendency to hold larger cash positions than its competitors. Its cash component had consistently increased from 14.52 per cent (November 2007) to 32 per cent (February 2008). Since January 2008, it has averaged at around 25 per cent.
In March 2008, when the prices fell and valuations looked to be more reasonable, the fund manager picked up Axis Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank which he avoided earlier because they were too expensive.
What's interesting about this fund is its penchant for broking stocks — India Infoline, Indiabulls Financial Services, IL&FS Investsmart and Motilal Oswal Financial Services. But financial institutions stocks like IDFC and IFCI are not courted.
What we like about this fund is its consistency. The fund manager's strategy may not deliver headline grabbing returns but it has led to a solid record over the long haul.
UTI BANKING SECTOR – IN LINE WITH INDEX
UTI Banking Sector has been, by and large an average performer.
Fund manager Gautami Desai has not been an opportunistic investor and prefers to invest in large banking stocks. This fund has avoided brokerage stocks and prefers financial institutions like Power Finance Corporation, LIC Housing Finance and IDFC.
This strategy has certainly not resulted in the fund shooting out the lights and last year it was behind its peers in terms of returns. And what was even more disappointing was that in the recent bear run it fell by 30.16 per cent, compared to Reliance Banking Fund's -22.26 per cent and JM Financial Services -33.36 per cent returns (March 2008 quarter).
What's amazing is that when UTI Banking Sector is compared to a banking exchange traded fund Banking BeES - there has barely been any addition of alpha. The two-year annualised returns are around 32 per cent, while Banking BeES delivers a higher three-year return. So logically, why would an investor pay 2 per cent more as annual expenses (with this sector fund) when the return is virtually identical?
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Banking funds are good for every portfolio
Risk-averse investors fancy capital-protection funds
What differentiates this capital-protection product from others is the use of long-dated options, that SEBI introduced in January this year. The product has been structured in such a way that a major chunk of an investor’s capital is put into highly-rated bonds, while the rest is used to buy Nifty call options, which expire 1-3 years from now.
So, for instance, if a client puts in Rs 100 into such a product, the fund manager of the PMS would invest, say, Rs 90 in bonds at a fixed interest rate to protect the capital. Rest of the money is used to buy (pay the premium for) a long-dated Nifty call or put that expire in 2009, 2010 or 2011.
“The gaining acceptance of this capital-protection product is driving activity in long-dated options,” said JM Financial Mutual Fund’s fund manager-derivatives, Biren Mehta.
Industry officials said PMS arms of ICICI Prudential Asset Management, Kotak Securities PMS and Emkay Shares and Stockbrokers are among the few, which are offering such products. This could not be individually verified with these players. But, some in the industry said the existing market conditions have made it difficult for them to sell this product to potential clients. “When we approach clients with such a product, the product is designed in such a way to suit market conditions at this moment. When the client finally approves to buy it, the situation might have changed,” said a top official with a brokerage’s wealth-management arm.
Equilibrium in MFs is in investor interest
As a kid, I had this toy that worked on the principle of balancing. It had two arms and no matter what contortions one subjected it to, it would sway, swing, wobble and come to a stop in the upright position.
It’s the same with the market — equilibrium would be reached as the various constituents act out their parts sensibly and the valuations are discovered, after factoring in all that is known - I have since realised.
Mutual funds are a very important component of the investment landscape. They act as a buffer between the investors and the stock market and reduce the risk by diversifying the investment, offering the services of a professional fund manager, ensuring liquidity at all times, etc.
But somehow, mutual funds have been portrayed as villains by the media and Sebi also seems to see the industry as fleecing the investors, which is unfortunate. The no-load-direct mode, introduced a few months back, was touted as a great step forward for the investors.
And now, there is this proposal to legitimise passback of commission, so they can legitimately get back some of the money their distributor earns. Also the investor may benefit.
But, that being the case, why are so many unit linked insurance plans (Ulips) being sold, where the first-year charges can be well over 70%? These schemes have so many charges, and are so well-packaged, that even people from financial services often fail to decipher them.
On top of it all, innovative handling of queries on charges and mis-selling are par for the course for insurance agents. After all, they earn double-digit commissions for a product that looks like a mutual fund scheme and offers insurance as an after thought.
Wouldn’t it be in the investors’ interest to be allowed to go direct in insurance plans, too? Clearly, that would allow them to save on a lot of costs. Also, unlike in MFs, one cannot change the agent easily in insurance.
When insurance companies are allowed a free run, why is the market regulator after the mutual fund industry? The question is pertinent because although these are competing products, there is no restriction on the charges on insurance.
Representations of the Association of Mutual Funds of India for a higher allowance of expenses to create a level playing field have been rebuffed. This is a problem with having multiple regulators rather than a single one for all financial services.
Given the disparity, MF distributors would gladly start selling Ulips, for they can earn a lot more there. The individual MF advisor earns 2-2.25% from selling MF schemes, on which he has to pay service tax, income tax and meet sales and operational costs. At the end, he may be left with barely 40% of the gross commission.
Intermediaries need to earn. An industry will remain healthy and vibrant only if the constituents are able to earn reasonable returns. Why else would be there in the first place?
But, clearly, the regulators do not think this applies to the mutual fund industry. Going by them, these players need to be controlled and disciplined as opposed to being just regulated. That’s a flawed premise.
Take the telecom industry. When it was government controlled, one had to register for a phone and wait endlessly. All that changed with the arrival of private operators and the ensuing competition. In a matter of years, the charges have come down from Rs 16 a minute to as low as 10 paise a minute.
This was achieved by creating an ecosystem with healthy competition, not by passing a diktat. Throttling the players with legislation would have killed what has grown into a vibrant industry and a major employer.
That’s precisely what the mutual funds industry needs, too. The regulator could look at other ways of deepening the market, broadening the reach and protecting investors’ interests.
The following constructive measures may be considered:
The regulator could look at ensuring that MF money stays invested longer, so people start participating in the growth story as investors, rather than buccaneers.
Introducing punitive exit loads, of say 5% for exits less than 12 months, could ensure that investors develop a long-term outlook, which is good for the industry and the economy at large. This will curb churning and ensure that investment in mutual funds is not 'hot money' that keeps moving in and out, such as those of the hedge funds.
This will bring stability in the market and give the fund manager the stability he needs to do his job properly, without constantly looking in the rear view mirror, for signs of redemption pressures.
Long-term investors can be incentivised. Lower expense ratios (of say, a maximum of 2.25% as opposed to 2.5%) for those staying invested for three years or more can be a tangible incentive.
Lastly, the anomalies should be corrected. When there were loads, the distributor was not expected to invest in his name and if he did, he had to inform that he was doing so to exclude those investments from commissions. Now that the no-load direct option is in, this system is redundant. Yet this continues.
It goes without a saying that equilibrium would eventually be reached, much like the toy I had. Only, whether it would be in the interests of the investor is another matter.
Only the nature of equity market had changed, not its potential
No cause for panic, say investment experts. Those with the qualifications and the technical know-how to assess the present situation assert that this is just the beginning of a new phase and investors will have to change their habits and attitudes accordingly.
Experts refuse to see the recent decline as a bear market. They rather term it as a correction in a bull market. They are confident that once the inflation concerns and the political uncertainty are past – and they will be sooner than later – the Indian equities will regain their flavour.
Their confidence stems from the facts that amidst all the gloom Indian businesses have continued to display very strong fundamentals. What’s needed to stabilize the proceedings is a stable government. Everyone is waiting for the first bit of good news to set the markets on an upward path.
Until that happens, though, experts say the markets will be range bound in the 10 to 15 percent band. The growth will be slow as compared to previous times. There are not too many positive triggers in the market at present. In the past, investors (read speculators) have become used to making a lot of money. There is no quick-money to be made in the market now. Investors will have to stay invested for the long-term to make fairly reasonable returns.
Over the last four years, there was a combination of positive factors working for the economy. Those fundamental factors have now changed. It will take time for the fundamentals to stabilise and people will have to patient during this phase. From now on, at least in the foreseeable future, there will be no instant money. The gains will certainly be there, but for those with an investment horizon of at least two to three years.
Wisdom therefore lies not in shying away from the market but entering it in small calculated steps. One good way to do this is through mutual funds.
With the booming stock market remaining volatile in the recent times, more and more investors are seeking mutual fund (MF) route to invest in the market. This can be seen from the number of investor folios rising faster than the growth in asset under management (AUM) of the MF industry. The Indian MF industry has grown at the compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 47 percent between 2003-08, which is next only to Russia at 97 percent and China at 67 percent during the same period. There are reports to say that in the next 2-3 years, the MF sector will grow at 35-40 percent.
A report from McKinsey & Company titled “Indian Asset Management: Achieving Broad-based Growth,” suggests that by 2012, the total money managed by mutual fund houses in India will be between $350bn and $440 bn. That’s a growth of 26-33 percent every year for the next four years.
McKinsey believes that the penetration of mutual funds is very low as compared to other markets. The current AUM amounts to 8 percent of GDP in India compared to 79 percent in the US and 39 percent in Brazil, according to the report. “About 3-4 percent of Indian households have invested in mutual funds and 42 percent of these households are located in the top eight cities,” it further elaborates, underscoring the underpenetration.
To capitalise on this growth opportunity, many new players have recently entered the fray, and at least 10 more are in various stages of launching their mutual fund businesses.
According to Lipper, an international fund tracking firm, Gulf investors earned substantial gains last year from both debt and equity funds.
Funds registered for sale in the Gulf region recorded an average gain of 19.26 percent in 2007, with equity funds from India emerging as the second best performing category after equity funds from China, said a recent Lipper report. Nineteen Among the top 20 GCC-registered funds were Indian. These included six funds from the Reliance Mutual Fund stable, four schemes each of UTI Mutual Fund and Birla Sun Life, three DSP-Merrill Lynch schemes and two HDFC Mutual Fund schemes.
Among the Indian funds, the rupee-dominated bond funds were the best performers in the bond category with about 20 percent return while equity funds gave an average return of 71.08 percent, against the overall average of 26.40 for all the equity funds.
Returns from the rupee-denominated general bond funds and government bond funds stood at 21.56 percent and 19.79 percent respectively. This, compared with an overall average return of 9.94 percent for the bond funds. Investors from the Gulf region were aggressively betting on the Indian market, the study said.
One must remember that the best time to enter the market is when the Sensex plunges. This may be a good time to buy stocks as most scrips are trading at very low prices. But the bigger question is whether you want to enter the equity market directly or opt for the mutual funds’ route.
According to one expert, investing directly in the stock market is good. You should look at splitting your money among 5-6 blue chip companies. However, if (and it’s a big if) you don’t have the expertise, then a diversified equity fund will be a safe bet. It’s better for new investors to enter the market in tranches. If you enter the market today and it falls by another 10 percent tomorrow, it will pinch you. So it’s better to spread your moves when the stock market looks bearish.
How have fund flows shaped up this year?
Foreign institutional investors have sold Rs 8,430 crore this month. The outflows amount to nearly 10% of total FII inflows to India till date.
Fund outflows, at Rs 13,036, were the highest in January this year. This was followed by June at Rs 8,430, Rs 7,770 crore in August 2007, and Rs 7,354 crore in March 2006.
There were negative fund inflows this year in four out of the six months. Fund inflows in 2008 stood at negative Rs 13,063 crore in January, Rs 1,733 crore in February, negative Rs 130 crore in March, Rs 1,075 in April, negative Rs 5,012 in May, and negative Rs 8,430 in June.
Year-to-date, FIIs have sold USD 6.2 billion in equities in the cash market. They were net purchasers to the tune of USD 10.4 billion in futures and options. In total, they net purchased USD 3.76 billion year-to-date. Of this, around USD 3.55 billion has been sold since May 20.
However, domestic institutional investors were net buyers to the tune of Rs 41,246 crore year-to-date. Mutual funds invested Rs 8,178 crore while banks, domestic financial institutions, and insurance companies invested Rs 33,068 crore.
Reliance Mutual Fund has about 16% market share and is sitting on USD 1.5 billion cash. On the other hand, there is extremely selective buying coming in from bigger fund houses like DSP Merrill Lynch, SBI and HDFC.
We are not really seeing a break in the 13-15% average cash level in the fund portfolios. But if we take a look at the numbers, there is selective buying coming from fund managers that has led to buying of about Rs 2,000 crore worth of shares in this month and Year-To-Date we have seen about Rs 8,000 crore worth of shares bought by fund managers.
So, it is clearly not the kind of cash one would expect from mutual funds that would add any support levels to the markets. But on the other hand, on the investors’ side, fund managers are not facing any redemption pressures.
But if this volatility continues to sustain for a longer period of time, there is a possibility that fund managers will have to face a lot of redemption. At this point, they aren’t even seeing any inflows coming in. So, on the investor side, there is panic but no redemption pressures as such.
Mutual funds play it safe with cash
Analysts say lack of positive signals and fears of possible redemption pressure in the near future seem to be keeping mutual funds from making investment decisions.
“Mutual funds seem to be sitting on huge cash as they might need some liquidity to service redemptions which might happen in volatile times. On the other hand, there is lack of good opportunity to deploy funds," said Mr Srinivas Jain, Chief Marketing Officer and Senior Vice-President, SBI Mutual Fund.
However, there are select funds cherrypicking at lower levels on Tuesday, with domestic institutions including mutual funds buying sticks worth (net) Rs 476 crore.
BSE Sensex fell 1.31 per cent to close at 14106.58.
Mutual funds are waiting to invest at lower levels, as there are chances of the markets falling further, said Mr Alex Matthew, Head of Research, Geojit Financial Services.
By May-end, over 292 equity schemes that were in operation had a total cash position of close to Rs 23,240 crore according to data from NAV India. At the end of April, equity schemes had cash levels of Rs 15,615 crore.
The assets under managements for the month ended May was Rs 6,00,266 crore, while the same for April was Rs 5,69,686 crore.
Around 40-50 per cent of the total assets under management of the industry are in equity schemes. Out of this, if the industry is holding around 10-15 per cent in cash, it is not very high considering the turbulence in markets, he added.
According to a research report by Sharekhan Securities, for June 2008, the top 10 cash-rich funds, include UTI Spread Fund, Kotak Equity Arbitrage Fund, Reliance Natural Resources Fund, Birla Sun Life Pure Value Fund, Reliance Quant Plus Fund, ICICI Prudential Blended Plan, IDFC Fixed Maturity Arbitrage Fund-s1 and ING Dynamic Asset Allocation Fund.
These are some of the cash rich equity diversified funds waiting for right valuations to invest, the report said.
In fact, fund houses sitting in cash will reduce their mark-to-market losses, and the larger the sums of cash, the more insulated they are, said an analyst. Sensex lost more than 30 per cent since January 2008.
Investors too seem to be playing it safe, having understood that mutual fund investments are for the long term, and so there is not much redemption happening, say analysts.
“Also in most cases where the NAVs of schemes have fallen by around 50 per cent, the investors will not want to exit at such low levels”, observed Mr Rakesh Goyal, Head-Distribution, Bonanza Portfolio.
Mr Sanjay Sinha, Chief Investment Officer, SBI Mutual Fund Management Private Ltd
Speaking with Anil Mascarenhas and Fahima Shaikh of India Infoline, Sanjay Sinha says, “FIIs have behaved in a logical manner and we are sure they will not stay away from the Indian market for too long.”
Inflation has been skyrocketing and oil prices have been soaring. How do you read the situation?
We have a practice to declare at least one dividend in actively managed funds every year. In case of sectoral funds, if we are able to capture any event in the industry, we would definitely part the surplus with our investors in terms of dividends.
FII Activity on 24-06-2008 - June 25, 2008
Fidelity to launch a distribution agency
“Setting up the asset management company was the first step and we are now working on this new business initiative of distribution of third party mutual funds,” Ashu Suyash, managing director and country head, Fidelity Fund Management, told ET.
“The setting up of a platform to make available third party funds is a natural extension of our belief to help in customer choice that helps customers in meeting their lifetime goals,” she added.
The rapid growth of assets in the MF industry and the fact that the money is coming from primarily a few cities is prompting many fund houses to expand their network. While many fund houses are setting up their own offices, others are using the services of independent distributors for the same. Fidelity India seems to have taken a cue from ‘FundsNetwork,’ — Fidelity’s online investment supermarket, operational in the US and UK. It brings together over 1,100 funds from over 60 different fund management companies, offering varied choice to investors and their advisers.
The Boston Consulting Group forecasts that the industry could more than triple assets to $520 billion by 2015, a prospect that has attracted global players such as American International Group and JPMorgan and prompting many more like Japan’s Shinsei Bank and UBS to queue up for MF licence. Fund distribution was always a lucrative business due to the commissions that a seller earns while selling a scheme to a customer.
Recently, financial services behemoth Merrill Lynch invested a sizeable stake in Bluechip Corporate Investment Centre, a Mumbai-headquartered financial products distribution house. Bajaj Capital, Way2 Wealth, RR Finance and banks like Citibank and HDFC Bank control a large part of the distribution business in India.
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Aggrasive Portfolio
- Principal Emerging Bluechip fund (Stock picker Fund) 11%
- Reliance Growth Fund (Stock Picker Fund) 11%
- IDFC Premier Equity Fund (Stock picker Fund) (STP) 11%
- HDFC Equity Fund (Mid cap Fund) 11%
- Birla Sun Life Front Line Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 10%
- HDFC TOP 200 Fund (Large Cap Fund) 8%
- Sundram BNP Paribas Select Midcap Fund (Midcap Fund) 8%
- Fidelity Special Situation Fund (Stock picker Fund) 8%
- Principal MIP Fund (15% Equity oriented) 10%
- IDFC Savings Advantage Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
- Kotak Flexi Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
Moderate Portfolio
- HDFC TOP 200 Fund (Large Cap Fund) 11%
- Principal Large Cap Fund (Largecap Equity Fund) 10%
- Reliance Vision Fund (Large Cap Fund) 10%
- IDFC Imperial Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 10%
- Reliance Regular Saving Fund (Stock Picker Fund) 10%
- Birla Sun Life Front Line Equity Fund (Large Cap Fund) 9%
- HDFC Prudence Fund (Balance Fund) 9%
- ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan (Dynamic Fund) 9%
- Principal MIP Fund (15% Equity oriented) 10%
- IDFC Savings Advantage Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
- Kotak Flexi Fund (Liquid Fund) 6%
Conservative Portfolio
- ICICI Prudential Index Fund (Index Fund) 16%
- HDFC Prudence Fund (Balance Fund) 16%
- Reliance Regular Savings Fund - Balanced Option (Balance Fund) 16%
- Principal Monthly Income Plan (MIP Fund) 16%
- HDFC TOP 200 Fund (Large Cap Fund) 8%
- Principal Large Cap Fund (Largecap Equity Fund) 8%
- JM Arbitrage Advantage Fund (Arbitrage Fund) 16%
- IDFC Savings Advantage Fund (Liquid Fund) 14%
Best SIP Fund For 10 Years
- IDFC Premier Equity Fund (Stock Picker Fund)
- Principal Emerging Bluechip Fund (Stock Picker Fund)
- Sundram BNP Paribas Select Midcap Fund (Midcap Fund)
- JM Emerging Leader Fund (Multicap Fund)
- Reliance Regular Saving Scheme (Equity Stock Picker)
- Biral Mid cap Fund (Mid cap Fund)
- Fidility Special Situation Fund (Stock Picker)
- DSP Gold Fund (Equity oriented Gold Sector Fund)