Saturday, August 22, 2009

Axis Asset Targets Top 10 Slot Among Indian Money Managers

Axis Asset Management Co., backed by India’s fourth-largest bank, aims to be one of the nation’s top 10 money managers in the next five years, said Chief Executive Officer Rajiv Anand.
Anand said he expects to receive approval from the stocks regulator to start operating the mutual fund business, set up in January, soon. He plans to offer funds from October and more than double the team to 100 people from 40 by March next year.
India’s funds industry has quadrupled in size over the past five years. Assets under management at mutual funds swelled more than four times to 6.9 trillion rupees ($142 billion) in the five years to July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Almost half of India’s 1.1 billion people are under 25 years old. They’re spending more on electronics, clothes and cars as incomes grow along with the economy and credit becomes more accessible.
“It’s a great time to be entering the business,” Anand said in an interview in Mumbai today. “Indian mutual funds that are backed by strong sponsors are witnessing faster growth in their assets under management than peers.”
Lower costs including for real estate and hiring are conducive for setting up a new business, he added.
Anand will seek to tap the client base at more than 550 cities across India where Axis Bank Ltd. has its branches.
“We want to become a significant player in the mutual fund business in the country,” said Anand. “The Axis brand name is very well known and that is a huge advantage for us to leverage the asset management business on.”
Anand said he plans to set up 12 branches across the country. He said he expects to offer money market funds in October subject to receiving regulatory approval and plans to start equity plans after Oct. 26.
He has hired Chandresh Nigam to head the equity business, while Ninad Deshpande will manage fixed-income products.
Anand said he would look at acquiring money managers to grow the business if he finds suitable opportunities.

AMFI has finalized design on separate MF platform: Sebi

Market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) today said the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) has finalised a design on a separate common platform for mutual funds.
"We recently had a meeting with the mutual funds and what the Association of Mutual Funds of India told us is that they have more or less frozen the kind of design that they want," Sebi Chairman C B Bhave today told reporters on the sidelines of the convocation of the Institute of Insurance and Risk Management (IIRM) of IRDA here.
"They will now look to competitive vendors for deciding on what kind of platform needs to be set up," Bhave added.
AMFI is planning to set up a common platform for the MFs which would allow retail investors to trade, switch over and compare the schemes online through a single window.
A common trading platform will not only enable investors to compare the performance of funds, but reduce the costs associated with investments in mutual funds, he added.
The idea is to provide all fund houses and distributors a single platform where investors can have the true sense of choice and an MF investor can access this common platform and choose the scheme that he wants to invest in.
At present, there are 38 mutual fund companies in the country.

Sebi clamps down on MF exit loads

The woes of the mutual fund industry just don't seem to get over. First came the entry load ban with effect from August 1.
Even before the issue of entry load settles down, market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has now clamped down on exit loads, forcing AMFI to issue a circular to fund houses on Thursday.
Well, the cat and mouse game between the mutual funds and Sebi continues.
After a ban on entry loads, mutual funds managed to circumvent it by increasing the exit loads. Sebi then banned differential exit loads for HNIs and retail investors and it has now issued a new diktat.
The regulator’s latest diktat on restricting the maximum period for exit loads has caught MFs off guard once again.
Following a closed door meeting with Sebi on Tuesday, AMFI is issuing a new circular to mutual funds, asking them to charge investors' exit loads only in the first year and not three years.
AP Kurian, chairman of AMFI, said, "It will take a couple of months for the industry to settle down. The impact will be clear by October end or November. Both AMCs and distributors will need to rework the way of doing business."
As the MFs are trying to grapple with the change in norms, sales have already dropped 60-70 per cent so far in August.
Experts believe that a fall in AUM will bring down the profitability of several fund houses as well..
Krishnan Sitaraman, head of fund services at CRISIL, said, "There would be an impact on projected cash flow and income flows, which fund houses have projected. The stronger utilities will survive."
The mutual fund industry complains that the regulator is doing too much too soon, but Sebi seems determined to clear the mess.
So, it will be important for the industry to come together and rework their business model.

Sebi plans to reduce IPO allotment period to 5 days

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is planning to reduce the IPO allotment period to five working days from the present 15 days and is hopeful of doing that in a year’s time, according to its chairman CB Bhave. “The cut in timeframe for allotment is a systemic change and we need to see how it progresses. Our ultimate aim is to reduce the timeframe to five working days. We would like it to happen as soon as possible. But, we also have to deal with the fact that the whole system has to change, Bhave told reporters during the sidelines of an event hosted by the Institute of Insurance and Risk Management (IIRM).
He added that Sebi is also minimising disclosure norms for fast processing of the rights issue. As per clause 8.19 of the Sebi DIP guidelines, currently, companies should finalise the basis of allotment within 15 days and utilise the rights issue proceeds only after the allotment is finalised.
“The main difficulty in reducing the period between the end of an issue and the day of listing is the fact that we have to handle a lot of physical applications. Along with these, physical cheques have to be cleared in the systems. So, it is our hope that as the ASBA (Application Supported by Blocked Amount) process becomes more popular, this processing will get reduced, and then we will be able to reduce the time line,” he said. As far as the ASBA process was concerned, Sebi has received some encouraging response in the recent NHPC issue where about 1,50,000 applications came through ASBA.
The regulator at present was looking at the proposed interest rates futures market. “An RBI and Sebi committee has worked on it and has called for applications from the stock exchanges which are in a fairly advanced state of preparation. We should see some results in the next couple of months,” he said. A joint technical committee of the Reserve Bank of India and SEBI had, in June, recommended allowing interest rate derivatives based on 10-year government bond yields. National Stock Exchange and MCX-SX are currently working on the modalities of launching rate futures.
On the common online platform for mutual fund transactions, Bhave said: “AMFI has told us they have more or less frozen the design they want. They will now look at competitive vendors to decide on what kind of platform needs to be set up.”

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