Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Sinha chosen new SEBI Chairman

U K Sinha, Chairman of UTI Mutual Fund, has been chosen by the government-appointed search committee to succeed C B Bhave as SEBI Chairman, according to media reports.

Sinha has been shortlisted after final interviews on Monday and a recommendation will be sent to the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet for approval, Business Line reported quoting unnamed highly placed sources in the government.

Sinha is currently also the Chairman of AMFI.

DNA Money reported that Sinha is said to have been named the next SEBI Chairman, but Rediff.com reported that Sinha has been named the new Chairman of SEBI and that he would take charge on February 17, the day Bhave’s three-year term gets over.

The search committee was headed by Cabinet Secretary K M Chandrasekhar. The other members included Ashok Chawla, Finance Secretary, R Gopalan, Secretary, Department of Financial Services; and Ms Alka Sirohi, Secretary in the Department of Personnel and Training.

Before moving to UTI, Sinha was Joint Secretary in the Department of Economic Affairs from June 2002 to October 2005.

Source:http://www.cafemutual.com/News/InnerNews.aspx?srno=94&MainType=New&NewsType=Industry&id=21

The Magic Formula Behind Dynamic Funds

All about the Dynamic fund characteristics

This type of fund brings an interesting element into equity fund investing.

Recently, two fund companies have launched schemes that of a type that are called ‘dynamic’ funds in the fund industry. The word dynamic here has a slightly different meaning than it does in everyday life. It doesn’t mean have a go-getting kind of personality, nor does it mean that the fund manager necessarily has that kind of a personality. It just means that the fund can shift its asset allocation widely between equity to debt and any combination thereof. In contrast, practically all other funds are contained by design within a fairly precise border of equity and/or debt.

However, dynamic funds often have another interesting characteristic. The balance between debt and equity is decided not by a fund manager, but by a formula. To be sure, this is not passive investing as in an index fund because the recipe for asset allocation is itself a result of research by the fund house, but there is an element of automation involved. These two new funds are Principal SMART from Principal Mutual Fund and Pramerica Dynamic Fund from the new company Pramerica. Of the dynamic funds that exist earlier, Franklin Templeton’s FT India Dynamic PE Ratio, ING’s OptiMix Asset Allocator and UTI’s Variable Investment Fund are formula driven while the asset allocation in SBI’s Magnum NRI FlexiAsset is decided by the fund manager.

For example, Principal SMART will stay entirely in equities while the Nifty’s PE will be below 16. At higher levels, the equity exposure will be reduced gradually till the fund becomes a pure debt fund at Nifty PEs of 28 and above.

The goal is always to use indicators like PE ratio and others to define a time when the markets are ready to fall and to reduce equity allocation at that time and to increase it when the markets have fallen enough. Either way, this type of fund brings an interesting element into equity fund investing. Normal equity funds are always supposed to be invested in equities. Conceptually, then, their job is to do better than the equity markets. Whether they say it so explicitly or not their job is not to make gains but to do better than their benchmark, even if that means falling less than the markets when the markets are falling.

Dynamic funds, on the other hand, implicitly make the promise of being absolute return funds. They define their job as making gains with their equity investments just like non-dynamic equity funds, but additionally as also getting out of equities when the markets are not going to do well.

Source: valueresearchonline.com

Just click away from joining most active Mutual Fund India google group

Google Groups
Subscribe to Mutual Fund india
Email:
Visit this group

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)