Comparitive Analysis of Mutual Funds and Ulips - Project Report
Comparitive Analysis of Mutual Funds and Ulips - Project Report
Comparitive Analysis of Mutual Funds and Ulips - Project Report
com
PREFACE
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INDUSTRY PROFILE
The mutual fund industry is a lot like the film star of the finance business.
Though it is perhaps the smallest segment of the industry, it is also the most
glamorous – in that it is a young industry where there are changes in the rules
of the game everyday, and there are constant shifts and upheavals.
The mutual fund is structured around a fairly simple concept, the mitigation
of risk through the spreading of investments across multiple entities, which is
achieved by the pooling of a number of small investments into a large bucket.
Yet it has been the subject of perhaps the most elaborate and prolonged
regulatory effort in the history of the country.
A little history:
The mutual fund industry started in India in a small way with the UTI Act
creating what was effectively a small savings division within the RBI. Over a
period of 25 years this grew fairly successfully and gave investors a good
return, and therefore in 1989, as the next logical step, public sector banks
and financial institutions were allowed to float mutual funds and their success
emboldened the government to allow the private sector to foray into this area.
The initial years of the industry also saw the emerging years of the Indian
equity market, when a number of mistakes were made and hence the mutual
fund schemes, which invested in lesser-known stocks and at very high levels,
became loss leaders for retail investors. From those days to today the retail
investor, for whom the mutual fund is actually intended, has not yet returned
to the industry in a big way. But to be fair, the industry too has focused on
brining in the large investor, so that it can create a significant base corpus,
which can make the retail investor feel more secure.
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No. of
Mutual Fund Name
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Schemes* As on Corpus
337 July 31, 7803
ABN AMRO M F
2008
54 July 31, 3513
AIG GlobalM F
2008
177 July 31, 29151.00
SBI Mutual Fund
2008
343 July 31, 37497.00
Birla Mutual Fund
2008
22 July 31, 56.00
BOB Mutual Fund
2008 Major
54 July 31, 4576.00
Canara Robeco Mutual Fund
2008 players in
80 July 31, 1853.00
DBS Chola Mutual Fund
2008 Indian
187 July 31, 10792.00
Deutsche Mutual Fund
2008
mutual
DSP Merrill Lynch Mutual Fund 211 Feb 29, 2008 19483.00
Escorts Mutual Fund 26 Feb 29, 2008 177.00 fund
Fidelity Mutual Fund 39 Mar 31, 2008 7464.00
Franklin Templeton 230 July 31, 24441.00 industry
Investments 2008
371 July 31, 50,752.00 and their
HDFC Mutual Fund
2008
221 July 31, 16,385.00
AUM
HSBC Mutual Fund
2008
431 July 31, 55,161.00
ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund
2008
262 July 31, 7091.00
ING Mutual Fund
2008
9 July 31, 3054.00
JPMorgan Mutual Fund
2008
185 July 31, 18,782.00
Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund
2008
112 July 31, 17,499.00
LIC Mutual Fund
2008
216 July 31, 7831.00
Lotus India Mutual Fund
2008
3 July 31, 2,814.00
Morgan Stanley Mutual Fund
2008
151 July 31, 11,359.00
PRINCIPAL Mutual Fund
2008
6 July 31, 66.00
Quantum Mutual Fund
2008
345 July 31, 84,564.00
Reliance Mutual Fund
2008
45 July 31, 175.00
Sahara Mutual Fund
2008
255 July 31, 2546.00
Mirae asset mutual fund
2008
219 July 31, 11,898.00
Sundaram Mutual Fund
2008
389 July 31, 20,443.00
Tata Mutual Fund
2008 6
14 July 31, 289.00
Taurus Mutual Fund
2008
315 July 31, 46,120.00
UTI Mutual Fund
2008
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The mutual fund industry in India started in 1963 with the formation of Unit
Trust of India, at the initiative of the Government of India and Reserve Bank.
The history of mutual funds in India can be broadly divided into four distinct
phases: -
An Act of Parliament established Unit Trust of India (UTI) on 1963. It was set
up by the Reserve Bank of India and functioned under the Regulatory and
administrative control of the Reserve Bank of India. In 1978 UTI was de-
linked from the RBI and the Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI) took
over the regulatory and administrative control in place of RBI. The first
scheme launched by UTI was Unit Scheme 1964. At the end of 1988 UTI had
Rs.6,700 crores of assets under management.
1987 marked the entry of non- UTI, public sector mutual funds set up by
public sector banks and Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) and General
Insurance Corporation of India (GIC). SBI Mutual Fund was the first non- UTI
Mutual Fund established in June 1987 followed by Can bank Mutual Fund
(Dec 87), Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund (Aug 89), Indian Bank Mutual
Fund (Nov 89), Bank of India (Jun 90), Bank of Baroda Mutual Fund (Oct 92).
LIC established its mutual fund in June 1989 while GIC had set up its mutual
fund in December 1990.
At the end of 1993, the mutual fund industry had assets under management
of Rs.47,004 crores.
With the entry of private sector funds in 1993, a new era started in the Indian
mutual fund industry, giving the Indian investors a wider choice of fund
families.
Also, 1993 was the year in which the first Mutual Fund Regulations came into
being, under which all mutual funds, except UTI were to be registered and
governed. The erstwhile Kothari Pioneer (now merged with Franklin
Templeton) was the first private sector mutual fund registered in July 1993.
In February 2003, following the repeal of the Unit Trust of India Act 1963 UTI
was bifurcated into two separate entities. One is the Specified Undertaking of
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the Unit Trust of India with assets under management of Rs.29,835 crores as
at the end of January 2003, representing broadly, the assets of US 64
scheme, assured return and certain other schemes. The Specified
Undertaking of Unit Trust of India, functioning under an administrator and
under the rules framed by Government of India and does not come under the
purview of the Mutual Fund Regulations.
The second is the UTI Mutual Fund Ltd, sponsored by SBI, PNB, BOB and
LIC. It is registered with SEBI and functions under the Mutual Fund
Regulations. With the bifurcation of the erstwhile UTI which had in March
2000 more than Rs.76,000 crores of assets under management and with the
setting up of a UTI Mutual Fund, conforming to the SEBI Mutual Fund
Regulations, and with recent mergers taking place among different private
sector funds, the mutual fund industry has entered its current phase of
consolidation and growth. As at the end of September, 2004, there were 29
funds, which manage assets of Rs.153108 crores under 421 schemes.
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ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
While the Indian mutual fund industry has grown in size by about 320% from
March, 1993 (Rs. 470 billion) to December, 2004 (Rs. 1505 billion) in terms of
AUM, the AUM of the sector excluding UTI has grown over 8 times from Rs.
152 billion in March 1999 to $ 148 billion as at March 2008.
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Though India is a minor player in the global mutual fund industry, its AUM as
a proportion of the global AUM has steadily increased and has doubled over
its levels in 1999.
The growth rate of Indian mutual fund industry has been increasing for the
last few years. It was approximately 0.12% in the year of 1999 and it is
noticed 0.25% in 2004 in terms of AUM as percentage of global AUM .
The most important trend in the mutual fund industry is the aggressive
expansion of the foreign owned mutual fund companies and the
decline of the companies floated by the nationalized banks and smaller
private sector players.
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Many nationalized banks got into the mutual fund business in the early
nineties and got off to a start due to the stock market boom was
prevailing. These banks did not really understand the mutual fund
business and they just viewed it as another kind of banking activity.
Few hired specialized staff and generally chose to transfer staff from
the parent organizations. The performance of most of the schemes
floated by these funds was not good. Some schemes had offered
guaranteed returns and their parent organizations had to bail out these
AMCs by paying large amounts of money as a difference between the
guaranteed and actual returns. The service levels were also very bad.
Most of these AMCs have not been able to retain staff, float new
schemes etc.
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TECHNOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT
IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGY
Mutual fund, during the last one decade brought out several innovations in
their products and is offering value added services to their investors. Some of
the value added services that are being offered are:
The innovation the industry saw was in the field of distribution to make it more
easily accessible to an ever increasing number of investors across the
country. For the first time in India the mutual fund start using the automated
trading, clearing and settlement system of stock exchanges for sale and
repurchase of open-ended de-materialized mutual fund units.
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With the increase in mutual fund players in India, a need for mutual fund
association in India was generated to function as a non-profit organization.
Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) was incorporated on 22 nd August
1995.
AMFI is an apex body of all Asset Management Companies (AMC), which has
been registered with SEBI. Till date all the AMCs are that have launched
mutual fund schemes are its members. It functions under the supervision and
guidelines of board of directors. AMFI has brought down the Indian Mutual
Fund Industry to a professional and healthy market with ethical lines
enhancing and maintaining standards. It follows the principle of both
protecting and promoting the interest of mutual funds as well as their unit
holders.
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It has been a forum where mutual funds have been able to present their
views, debate and participate in creating their own regulatory framework. The
association was created originally as a body that would lobby with the
regulator to ensure that the fund viewpoint was heard. Today, it is usually the
body that is consulted on matters long before regulations are framed, and it
often initiates many regulatory changes that prevent malpractices that
emerge from time to time.
OBJECTIVES:
To define and maintain high professional and ethical standards in all areas
of operation of mutual fund industry
To interact with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and to
represent to SEBI on all matters concerning the mutual fund industry.
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MEMBERS OF AMFI:
o Bank Sponsored
2. Others
o Institutions
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o Private Sector
1. Indian
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2. Foreign
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Like Banking & Insurance up to the nineties of the last century, Mutual Fund
industry in India was set up and functioned exclusively in the state monopoly
represented by the Unit Trust of India. This monopoly was diluted in the
eighties by allowing nationalized banks and insurance companies (LIC & GIC)
to set up their institutions under the Indian Trusts Act to transact mutual fund
business, allowing the Indian investor the option to choose between different
service providers. Unit Trust was a statutory corporation governed by its own
incorporating act. There was no separate regulatory authority up to the time
SEBI was made a statutory authority in 1992. but it was only in the year 1993,
when a government took a policy decision to deregulate Indian Economy from
government control and to transform it market oriented, that the industry was
opened to competition from private and foreign players. By the year 2000
there came to be established in the market 34 mutual funds offerings a variety
of about 550 schemes.
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The SEBI mutual fund regulations contain ten chapters and twelve schedules.
Chapters containing material subjects relating to regulation and conduct of
business by Mutual Funds.
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Furnishing information
4. The Board may require the sponsor to furnish such further information or
clarification as may be required by it.
Eligibility criteria
5. For the purpose of grant of a certificate of registration, the applicant has to
fulfill the following, namely :—
(a) the sponsor should have a sound track record and general reputation of
fairness and integrity in all his business transactions.
Explanation : For the purposes of this clause “sound track record” shall mean
the
sponsor should,—
(i) be carrying on business in financial services for a period of not less than
five
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years; and
(ii) the networth is positive in all the immediately preceding five years; and
(iii) the networth in the immediately preceding year is more than the capital
contribution of the sponsor in the asset management company; and
(iv) the sponsor has profits after providing for depreciation, interest and tax in
three out of the immediately preceding five years, including the fifth year;
(b) in the case of an existing mutual fund, such fund is in the form of a trust
and the trust deed has been approved by the Board;
(c) the sponsor has contributed or contributes at least 40% to the net worth of
the asset management company:
Provided that any person who holds 40% or more of the net worth of an
asset
management company shall be deemed to be a sponsor and will be required
to fulfill the eligibility criteria specified in these regulations;
(d) the sponsor or any of its directors or the principal officer to be employed
by the mutual fund should not have been guilty of fraud or has not been
convicted of an offence involving moral turpitude or has not been found guilty
of any economic
offence;
Consideration of application
8. The Board, may on receipt of all information decide the application.
Rejection of application
11. Where the sponsor does not satisfy the eligibility criteria mentioned in
regulation 7, the Board may reject the application and inform the applicant of
the same.
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Provided that the Board may, on being satisfied with the reasons for the
delay permit the mutual fund to pay the service fee at any time before the
expiry of two months from the commencement of the financial year to which
such fee relates.
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14. (1) The application for the approval of the asset management company
shall be made in Form D.
(2) The provisions of regulations 5, 6 and 8 shall, so far as may be, apply to
the
application made under sub-regulation (1) as they apply to the application for
registration of a mutual fund.
(3) Any change in the appointment of the asset management company shall
be subject to prior approval of the Board and the unitholders.
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Provided [further] that the period specified in the first proviso may be
extended in appropriate cases by the Board up to three years for reasons to
be recorded in writing :
Provided further that no new schemes shall be allowed to be launched or
managed by such asset management company till the networth has been
raised to rupees ten crores.
Explanation : For the purposes of this clause, “networth” means the
aggregate of the paid up capital and free reserves of the asset management
company after
deducting therefrom miscellaneous expenditure to the extent not written off or
adjusted or deferred revenue expenditure, intangible assets and accumulated
losses.
(2) The Board may, after considering an application with reference to the
matters
specified in sub-regulation (1), grant approval to the asset management
company.
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(2) not undertake any other business activities except activities in the nature
of
portfolio management services,] management and advisory services to
offshore funds, pension funds, provident funds, venture capital funds,
management of insurance funds, financial consultancy and exchange of
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research on commercial basis if any of such activities are not in conflict with
the activities of the mutual fund :
Provided that the asset management company may itself or through its
subsidiaries undertake such activities if it satisfies the Board that the key
personnel of the asset management company, the systems, back office, bank
and securities accounts are segregated activity-wise and there exist systems
to prohibit access to inside information of various activities :
Provided further that asset management company shall meet capital
adequacy
requirements, if any, separately for each such activity and obtain separate
approval, if necessary under the relevant regulations.
(3) The asset management company shall not invest in any of its schemes
unless full disclosure of its intention to invest has been made in the offer
documents 34[in case of schemes launched after the notification of these
regulations :
Provided that an asset management company shall not be entitled to charge
any fees on its investment in that scheme.
20. (1) The asset management company shall take all reasonable steps and
exercise due diligence to ensure that the investment of funds pertaining to
any scheme is not contrary to the provisions of these regulations and the trust
deed.
(2) The asset management company shall exercise due diligence and care in
all its investment decisions as would be exercised by other persons engaged
in the same business.
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(3) The asset management company shall be responsible for the acts of
commission or omission by its employees or the persons whose services
have been procured by the asset management company.
(4) The asset management company shall submit to the trustees quarterly
reports of each year on its activities and the compliance with these
regulations.
(5) The trustees at the request of the asset management company may
terminate the assignment of the asset management company at any time:
Provided that such termination shall become effective only after the trustees
have accepted the termination of assignment and communicated their
decision in writing to the asset management company.
(6A) The Chief Executive Officer (whatever his designation may be) of the
asset
management company shall ensure that the mutual fund complies with all the
provisions of these regulations and the guidelines or circulars issued in
relation thereto from time to time and that the investments made by the fund
managers are in the interest of the unit holders and shall also be responsible
for the overall risk management function of the mutual fund.
Explanation.—For the purpose of this sub-regulation, the words “these
regulations” shall mean and include the Securities and Exchange Board of
India (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996 as amended from time to time.
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(6B) The fund managers (whatever the designation may be) shall ensure that
the funds of the schemes are invested to achieve the objectives of the
scheme and in the interest of the unit holders.
(7) (a) An asset management company shall not through any broker
associated with the sponsor, purchase or sell securities, which is average of 5
per cent or more of the aggregate purchases and sale of securities made by
the mutual fund in all its schemes :
Provided that for the purpose of this sub-regulation, the aggregate purchase
and sale of securities shall exclude sale and distribution of units issued by the
mutual fund :
Provided further that the aforesaid limit of 5 per cent shall apply for a block
of any three months.
(b) An asset management company shall not purchase or sell securities
through any broker [other than a broker referred to in clause (a) of sub-
regulation (7) which is average of 5 per cent or more of the aggregate
purchases and sale of securities made by the mutual fund in all its schemes,
unless the asset management company has recorded in writing the
justification for exceeding the limit of 5 per cent and reports of all such
investments are sent to the trustees on a quarterly basis :
Provided that the aforesaid limit shall apply for a block of three months.
(8) An asset management company shall not utilise the services of the
sponsor or any of its associates, employees or their relatives, for the purpose
of any securities transaction and distribution and sale of securities :
Provided that an asset management company may utilise such services if
disclosure to that effect is made to the unitholders and the brokerage or
commission paid is also disclosed in the half-yearly annual accounts of the
mutual fund :
Provided further that the mutual funds shall disclose at the time of declaring
halfyearly and yearly results :
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(9) The asset management company shall file with the trustees the details of
transactions in securities by the key personnel of the asset management
company in their own name or on behalf of the asset management company
and shall also report to the Board, as and when required by the Board.
(10) In case the asset management company enters into any securities
transactions with any of its associates a report to that effect shall be sent to
the trustees at its next meeting.
(11) In case any company has invested more than 5 per cent of the net asset
value of a scheme, the investment made by that scheme or by any other
scheme of the same mutual fund in that company or its subsidiaries shall be
brought to the notice of the trustees by the asset management company and
be disclosed in the half-yearly and annual accounts of the respective
schemes with justification for such investment 40[provided the latter
investment has been made within one year of the date of the former
investment calculated on either side.
(12) The asset management company shall file with the trustees and the
Board—
(a) detailed bio-data of all its directors along with their interest in other
companies
within fifteen days of their appointment;
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(b) any change in the interests of directors every six months; and
(c) a quarterly report to the trustees giving details and adequate justification
about the purchase and sale of the securities of the group companies of the
sponsor or the asset management company, as the case may be, by the
mutual fund during the said quarter.
(13) Each director of the asset management company shall file the details of
his transactions of dealing in securities with the trustees on a quarterly basis
in accordance with guidelines issued by the Board.
(14) The asset management company shall not appoint any person as key
personnel who has been found guilty of any economic offence or involved in
violation of securities laws.
(15) The asset management company shall appoint registrars and share
transfer agents who are registered with the Board:
Provided if the work relating to the transfer of units is processed in-house,
the charges at competitive market rates may be debited to the scheme and
for rates higher than the competitive market rates, prior approval of the
trustees shall be obtained and reasons for charging higher rates shall be
disclosed in the annual accounts.
(16) The asset management company shall abide by the Code of Conduct as
specified in the Fifth Schedule.
Appointment of custodian
21. (1) The mutual fund shall appoint a Custodian to carry out the custodial
services for the schemes of the fund and sent intimation of the same to the
Board within fifteen days of the appointment of the Custodian:
Provided that in case of a gold exchange traded fund scheme, the assets of
the scheme being gold or gold related instruments may be kept in custody of
a bank which is registered as a custodian with the Board.
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(2) No custodian in which the sponsor or its associates hold 50 per cent or
more of the voting rights of the share capital of the custodian or where 50 per
cent or more of the directors of the custodian represent the interest of the
sponsor or its associates shall act as custodian for a mutual fund constituted
by the same sponsor or any of its associates or subsidiary company.
22. The mutual fund shall enter into a custodian agreement with the
custodian, which shall contain the clauses which are necessary for the
efficient and orderly conduct of the affairs of the custodian:
Provided that the agreement, the service contract, terms and appointment of
the
custodian shall be entered into with the prior approval of the trustees.
• The ownership is in the hands of the investors who have pooled in their
funds.
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Portfolio Diversification
Professional Management
Low Costs
Liquidity
Transparency
Flexibility
Convenient Administration
Affordability
Well Regulated
All mutual funds are registered with SEBI and they function with in the
provisions of strict regulations designed to protect the interest of investors.
The operations of mutual funds are regularly monitored by SEBI.
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No Guarantees
No investment is risk free. If the entire stock market declines in value, the
value of mutual fund shares will go down as well, no matter how balanced the
portfolio. Investors encounter fewer risks when they invest in mutual funds
than when they buy and sell stocks on their own. However, anyone who
invests through mutual fund runs the risk of losing the money.
All funds charge administrative fees to cover their day to day expenses.
Some funds also charge sales commissions or loads to compensate brokers,
financial consultants, or financial planners. Even if you don’t use a broker or
other financial advisor, you will pay a sales commission if you buy shares in a
Load Fund.
Taxes
During a typical year, most actively managed mutual funds sell anywhere
from 20 to 70 percent of the securities in their portfolios. If your fund makes a
profit on its sales, you will pay taxes on the income you receive, even you
reinvest the money you made.
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Management Risk
When you invest in mutual fund, you depend on fund manager to make the
right decisions regarding the fund’s portfolio. If the manager does not perform
as well as you had hoped, you might not make as much money on your
investment as you expected. Of course, if you invest in index funds, you
forego management risk because these funds do not employ managers.
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There are many entities involved and the diagram below illustrates the structu
re of mutual funds: -
SEBI
The regulation of mutual funds operating in India falls under the preview
of authority of the “Securities and Exchange Board of India” (SEBI). Any
person proposing to set up a mutual fund in India is required under the SEBI
(Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996 to be registered with the SEBI.
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Sponsor
The sponsor should contribute at least 40% to the net worth of the AMC.
However, if any person holds 40% or more of the net worth of an AMC shall
be deemed to be a sponsor and will be required to fulfill the eligibility criteria
in the Mutual Fund Regulations. The sponsor or any of its directors or the
principal officer employed by the mutual fund should not be guilty of fraud or
guilty of any economic offence.
Trustees
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5. The board of directors of such AMC has at least 50% directors who are
not associate of or associated in any manner with the sponsor or any
of its subsidiaries or the trustees.
Custodian
Unit Holders
They are the parties to whom the mutual fund is sold. They are ultimate
beneficiary of the income earned by the mutual funds.
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In India, there are many companies, both public and private that are engaged
in the trading of mutual funds. Wide varieties of Mutual Fund Schemes exist
to cater to the needs such as financial position, risk tolerance and return
expectations etc. Investment can be made either in the debt Securities or
equity .The table below gives an overview into the existing types of schemes
in the Industry.
Objectives
Other Debt
Schemes Small cap
fund
Any Other
Equity Fund
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Dividend Growth
Payout Reinvested
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According to Structure
An open – ended fund is one that is available for subscription all through the
year. These do not have a fixed maturity. Investors can conveniently buy and
sell units at Net Asset Value (NAV) related prices. The key feature of open –
ended schemes is liquidity.
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back the units to the mutual fund through periodic repurchase at NAV related
prices.
Interval Funds
Interval funds combine the features of open – ended and close – ended
schemes. They are open for sales or redemption during pre-determined
intervals at their NAV.
Growth Funds
Income Funds
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Balanced Funds
Other Schemes
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Special Schemes:
Index Schemes
Bond Schemes
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Net Asset Value (NAV) - Net Asset Value is the market value of the
assets of the scheme minus its liabilities. The per unit NAV is the net asset
value of the scheme divided by the number of units outstanding on the
Valuation Date.
Sales Price - Is the price you pay when you invest in a scheme. Also called
Offer Price. It may include a sales load.
Sales Load - Is a charge collected by a scheme when it sells the units. Also
called ‘Front-end’ load. Schemes that do not charge a load are called ‘No
Load’ schemes.
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ULIPS
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World over , insurance come in different forms and shapes . although the
generic names may find similar , the difference in product features makes one
wonder about the basis on which these products are designed .With
insurance market opened up , Indian customer has suddenly found himself in
a market place where he is bombarded with a lot of jargon as well as
marketing gimmicks with a very little knowledge of what is happening . This
module is aimed at clarifying these underlying concepts and simplifying the
different products available in the market.
We have many products like Endowment , Whole life , Money back etc. All
these products are based on following basic platforms or structures viz.
Traditional Life
Universal Life or Unit Linked Policies
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3.1.1 FEATURES OF TL :
A Unit Link Insurance Policy (ULIP) is one in which the customer is provided
with a life insurance cover and the premium paid is invested in either debt or
equity products or a combination of the two. In other words, it enables the
buyer to secure some protection for his family in the event of his untimely
death and at the same time provides him an opportunity to earn a return on
his premium paid. In the event of the insured person's untimely death, his
nominees would normally receive an amount that is the higher of the sum
assured or the value of the units (investments).
Unit Linked Insurance Plans came into play in the 1960s and became very
popular in Western Europe and Americas. In India The first unit linked
Insurance Plan , popularly known as ULIP – Unit Linked Insurance Plan in
India was brought out by Unit Trust Of India in the year 1971 by entering into
a group insurance arrangement with LIC o provide for life cover to the
investors , while UTI , as a mutual was taking care of investing the unit
holders money in the capital market and giving them a fair return .
Subsequently in the year 1989 , another Unit Linked Product was launched
by the LIC Mutual Fund called by the name of “DHANARAKSHA” which was
more or less on the line of ULIP of UTI . Thereafter LIC itself came out with a
Unit Linked Insurance Product known by name “BIMA PLUS “ in the year
2001-02 .
TYPES OF ULIP
There are various unit linked insurance plans available in the market.
However, the key ones are pension, children, group and capital guarantee
plans.
The pension plans come with two variations — with and without life cover —
and are meant for people who want to generate returns for their sunset years.
The children plans, on the other hand, are aimed at taking care of their
educational and other needs..
Apart from unit-linked plans for individuals, group unit linked plans are also
available in the market. The Group linked plans are basically designed for
employers who want to offer certain benefits for their employees such as
gratuity, superannuation and leave encashment.
The other important category of ULIPs is capital guarantee plans. The plan
promises the policyholder that at least the premium paid will be returned at
maturity. But the guaranteed amount is payable only when the policy's
maturity value is below the total premium paid by the individual till maturity.
However, the guarantee is not provided on the actual premium paid but only
on that portion of the premium that is net of expenses (mortality, sales and
marketing, administration).
ULIPs work on the lines of mutual funds. The premium paid by the client (less
any charge) is used to buy units in various funds (aggressive, balanced or
conservative) floated by the insurance companies. Units are bought according
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• As in all insurance policies, the risk charge (mortality rate) varies with
age.
• The maturity benefit is not typically a fixed amount and the maturity
period can be advanced or extended.
• ULIP products are exempted from tax and they provide life insurance.
USP of ULIPS
ULIPs serve the purpose of providing life insurance combined with savings at
market-linked returns. To that extent, ULIPS can be termed as a two-in-one
plan in terms of giving an individual the twin benefits of life insurance plus
savings.
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Although this is how the ULIP options are generally designed, the exact
debt/equity allocations may vary across insurance companies. Individuals can
opt for a variant based on their risk profile.
Flexibility
The flexibility with which individuals can switch between the ULIP variants to
capitalise on investment opportunities across the equity and debt markets is
what distinguishes it from other instruments. Some insurance companies
allow a certain number of ‘free’ switches. Switching also helps individuals on
another front. They can shift from an Aggressive to a Balanced or a
Conservative ULIP as they approach retirement. This is a reflection of the
change in their risk appetite as they grow older.
HURDLES OF ULIP
NO STANDARDIZATION
All the costs are levied in ways that do not lend to standardisation. If one
company calculates administration cost by a formula, another levies a flat
rate. If one company allows a range of the sum assured (SA), another allows
only a multiple of the premium. There was also the problem of a varying cost
structure with age
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ULIP is known to be more flexible in nature than the traditional plans and, on
most counts, they are. However, some insurance companies do not allow the
individual to fix the life cover that he needs. These rely on a multiplier that is
fixed by the insurer
Insurance companies work on illustrations. They are allowed to show you how
much your annual premium will be worth if it grew at 10 per cent per annum.
But there are costs, so each company also gives a post-cost return at the 10
per cent illustration, calling it the yield. some companies were not including
the mortality cost while calculating the yield. This amounts to overstating the
yield.
During the process of collecting information, it was found that the sales
benefit illustration shown was not conforming to the Insurance Regulatory and
Development Authority (Irda) format. in many locations30 per cent return
illustrations are still rampant
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The Ulip product works over the long term. The earlier the exit, the worse off
is the investor since he ends up redeeming a high-front-load product and is
then encouraged to move into another higher cost product at that stage. An
early exit also takes away the benefit of compounding from insured.
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CREEPING COSTS
Since the investors are now more aware than before and have begun to ask
for costs, some companies have found a way to answer that without
disclosing too much. People are now asking how much of the premium will go
to work. There are plans that are able to say 92 per cent will be invested, that
is, will have a front load of just 8 per cent. What they do not say is the much
higher policy administration cost that is tucked away inside (adjusted from the
fund value).
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COMPARISON
BETWEEN ULIPS
AND MUTUAL
FUNDS
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Similarly ULIP investors have the option of investing across various schemes
similar to the ones found in the mutual funds domain, i.e. diversified equity
funds, balanced funds and debt funds to name a few. Generally speaking,
ULIPs can be termed as mutual fund schemes with an insurance component.
However it should not be construed that barring the insurance element there
is nothing differentiating mutual funds from ULIPs.
Mutual fund investors have the option of either making lump sum investments
or investing using the systematic investment plan (SIP) route which entails
commitments over longer time horizons. The minimum investment amounts
are laid out by the fund house.
ULIP investors also have the choice of investing in a lump sum (single
premium) or using the conventional route, i.e. making premium payments on
an annual, half-yearly, quarterly or monthly basis. In ULIPs, determining the
premium paid is often the starting point for the investment activity.
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ULIP investors also have the flexibility to alter the premium amounts during
the policy's tenure. For example an individual with access to surplus funds
can enhance the contribution thereby ensuring that his surplus funds are
gainfully invested; conversely an individual faced with a liquidity crunch has
the option of paying a lower amount (the difference being adjusted in the
accumulated value of his ULIP). The freedom to modify premium payments at
one's convenience clearly gives ULIP investors an edge over their mutual
fund counterparts.
2. Expenses
In mutual fund investments, expenses charged for various activities like fund
management, sales and marketing, administration among others are subject
to pre-determined upper limits as prescribed by the Securities and Exchange
Board of India.
Similarly funds also charge their investors entry and exit loads (in most cases,
either is applicable). Entry loads are charged at the timing of making an
investment while the exit load is charged at the time of sale.
restraint placed is that insurers are required to notify the regulator of all the
expenses that will be charged on their ULIP offerings.
3. Portfolio disclosure
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As was stated earlier, offerings in both the mutual funds segment and ULIPs
segment are largely comparable. For example plans that invest their entire
corpus in equities (diversified equity funds), a 60:40 allotment in equity and
debt instruments (balanced funds) and those investing only in debt
instruments (debt funds) can be found in both ULIPs and mutual funds.
If a mutual fund investor in a diversified equity fund wishes to shift his corpus
into a debt from the same fund house, he could have to bear an exit load
and/or entry load.
On the other hand most insurance companies permit their ULIP inventors to
shift investments across various plans/asset classes either at a nominal or no
cost (usually, a couple of switches are allowed free of charge every year and
a cost has to be borne for additional switches).
Effectively the ULIP investor is given the option to invest across asset classes
as per his convenience in a cost-effective manner.
This can prove to be very useful for investors, for example in a bull market
when the ULIP investor's equity component has appreciated, he can book
profits by simply transferring the requisite amount to a debt-oriented plan.
5. Tax benefits
ULIP investments qualify for deductions under Section 80C of the Income Tax
Act. This holds good, irrespective of the nature of the plan chosen by the
investor. On the other hand in the mutual funds domain, only investments in
tax-saving funds (also referred to as equity-linked savings schemes) are
eligible for Section 80C benefits.
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Maturity proceeds from ULIPs are tax free. In case of equity-oriented funds
(for example diversified equity funds, balanced funds), if the investments are
held for a period over 12 months, the gains are tax free; conversely
investments sold within a 12-month period attract short-term capital gains tax
@ 10%.
Despite the seemingly similar structures evidently both mutual funds and
ULIPs have their unique set of advantages to offer. As always, it is vital for
investors to be aware of the nuances in both offerings and make informed
decisions.
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The high returns (above 20 per cent) are definitely not sustainable over a
long term, as they have been generated during the biggest bull run in recent
stock market history.
The free hand given to ULIPs might prove risky if the timing of exit happens to
coincide with a bearish market phase, because of the inherently high equity
component of these schemes.
The appreciation in the net asset value (NAV) of ULIPs barely indicate the
actual returns earned on your investment. The various charges on your policy
are deducted either directly from premiums before investing in units or
collected on a monthly basis by knocking off units.
Either way, the charges do not affect the NAV; but the number of units in your
account suffers. You might have access to daily NAVs but your real returns
may be substantially lower.
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The charges are higher for a linked plan than a non-linked plan, as the former
require lot more servicing than the latter, such as regular disclosure of
investments, switches, re-direction of premiums, withdrawals, and so on.
Insurance companies have the discretion to structure their expenses structure
whereas a mutual fund does not have that luxury. The expense ratios in their
case cannot exceed 2.5 per cent for an equity plan and 2.25 per cent for a
debt plan respectively. The lack of regulation on the expense front works to
the detriment of investors in ULIPs.
If we want to withdraw from the plan, you lose out, as you will have to pay
withdrawal charges up to a certain number of years.
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Insurance companies argue that comparing ULIPs with mutual funds is like
comparing oranges with apples, as the objectives are different for both the
products.
Most ULIPs give us the choice of a minimum investment cover so that we can
direct maximum premiums towards investments.
Thus, both ULIPs and mutual funds target the same customers. If risk
cover is your primary objective, pure insurance plans are less expensive.
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Try top-ups
Some companies also give a credit on top-ups. For instance, if you pay in Rs
100 as a top up, the actual allocation to units will be Rs 101. If you keep the
regular premiums to the minimum and increase your top ups, you can save
up on charges, enhancing returns in the long run.
The price of the life cover attached to a ULIP is higher than a normal term
plan. Risk charges are charged on a daily or monthly basis depending on the
daily amount at risk. Rates are not locked and are charged on a one-year
renewal basis.
Our life cover charges would depend on the accumulation in your investment
account. As accumulation increases, the amount at risk for the insurance
company decreases. However, with increasing age, the cost per Rs 1,000
sum assured increases, effectively increasing your overall insurance costs. A
lower life cover could yield better returns.
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Any riders, such as accident rider or critical illness rider, are also charged on
a one-year renewal basis. Opting for these riders with a plain insurance cover
could provide better value for money.
ULIP's as an investment is a very good vehicle for wealth creation ,but way
Unit Linked Insurance schemes are sold by insurance company
representative's and insurance advisors is not correct.
a) Up-front Charges
b) Mortality Charges ( Charges for providing the risk cover for life)
c) Administrative Charges
d) Fund Management Charges
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Liquidity
Mutual fund investments, on the other hand, can be redeemed at any time,
barring ELSS (equity-linked savings schemes). Exit loads, if applicable , are
generally for six months to a year in equity funds. So mutual funds score
substantially higher on liquidity.
Tax efficiency
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Expenses
Insurance agents get high commissions for ULIPs, and they get them in the
initial years, not staggered over the term. So the insurer recovers most
charges from you in the initial years, as it risks a loss if the policy lapses.
Typically , insurers levy enormous selling charges, averaging more than 20%
of the first year’s premium, and dropping to 10% and 7.5% in subsequent
years. (And this is after investors balked when charges were as high as 65%!)
Compare this with mutual funds’ fees of 2.25% on entry, uniform for all
schemes. Different ULIPs have varying charges, often not made clear to
investors.
For instance, an agent who sells you a ULIP may get 25% of your first year’s
premium, 10% in the second year, 7.5% in the third and fourth year and 5%
thereafter. If your annual premium is Rs 10,000 and the agent’s commission
in the first year is 25%, it means only Rs 7,500 of your money is invested in
the first year. So even if the NAV of the fund rises, say 20%, that year, your
portfolio would be worth only Rs 9,000—much lower than the Rs 10,000 you
paid. On the other hand, if you invest Rs 10,000 in an equity scheme with a
2.25% entry load, Rs 225 is deducted , and the rest is invested. If the
scheme’s NAV rises 20%, your portfolio is worth Rs 11,730. This shows how
ULIPs work out expensive for investors. Deduct the cost of a term policy from
the mutual fund returns, and you’re still left with a sizeable difference.
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Chapter – 2
SBI Mutual Fund
Company Profile
Awards & Achievements
Products
Major Funds of SBI Mutual Fund
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SBI Mutual Fund is India’s largest bank sponsored mutual fund and has an
enviable track record in judicious investments and consistent wealth creation.
The fund traces its lineage to SBI - India’s largest banking enterprise. The
institution has grown immensely since its inception and today it is India's
largest bank, patronised by over 80% of the top corporate houses of the
country.
SBI Mutual Fund is a joint venture between the State Bank of India and
Société Générale Asset Management, one of the world’s leading
fund management companies that manages over US$ 500 Billion
worldwide.
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A total of over 5.4 million investors have reposed their faith in the wealth
generation expertise of the Mutual Fund.
Today, the fund manages over Rs. 31,794 crores of assets and has a diverse
profile of investors actively parking their investments across 36 active
schemes.
The fund serves this vast family of investors by reaching out to them through
network of over 130 points of acceptance, 28 investor service centers, 46
investor service desks and 56 district organisers.
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KEY PERSONNEL:
Mr. C A Santosh
Chief Manager - Customer Service.
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• SBI Mutual Fund (SBIMF) has been the proud recipient of the:
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PRODUCTS
EQUITY FUNDS:
DEBT SCHEMES
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BALANCED SCHEMES
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(EQUITY FUND)
Investment Objective
Asset Allocation
% of Portfolio of
Instrument Risk Profile
Plan A & B
Equity and equity related instruments of
within 65% – 100% High
commodity based companies
Foreign Securities/ADRs/GDRs of
0% - 10% High
commodity based companies
Fixed/Floating Rate Debt instruments
0% - 30% Medium
including derivatives
Money Market instruments* 0% - 30% Low
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Scheme Highlights
Minimum Application
2.Minimum Investment Rs. 5000 and in multiples of Rs. 1000 Dividend and
Growth options available.Reinvestment and payout facility available.
SIP
Rs.500/month - 12 months
Rs.1000/month - 6months,
Rs.1500/quarter - 12 months
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(DEBT FUND)
Investment Objective
The objective of the scheme is to provide the investors an opportunity to earn,
in accordance with their requirements, through capital gains or through
regular dividends, returns that would be higher than the returns offered by
comparable investment avenues through investment in debt & money market
securities.
Asset Allocation
% of Portfolio of
Instrument Risk Profile
Plan A & B
Corporate debentures &
Bonds/PSU/FI/Govt. Guaranteed
Upto 90% High
Bonds / Other including Securitised
Debt
Not more than 10%
Securitized Debt Low
of in debt
Government Securities Upto 90% High
Cash & Call Money Upto 25% Medium
Money Market Instruments Upto 25% Mediom
Units of other mutual funds Upto 5% Low
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Scheme Highlights
2. The Plans will invest their entire corpus in high quality debt
(Corporate debentures, PSU/FI/Govt guaranteed bonds), Govt
securities and money market instruments (commercial paper,
certificates of deposit, T-bills, bills rediscounting, repos, short-
term bank deposits, etc). There shall be no investment in equity.
3. The Growth Plan / Option will give returns through capital gains only. No
dividends shall be declared under this Plan. The Dividend Plan will
endeavour to declare regular dividends every half year, depending on
the NAV at that point of time. The Dividend Option in Floating Rate
Short Term Plan will endeavour to declare dividends on a monthly
basis while the dividend option under the Floating Rate Plan Long
Term (Regular and Institutional) Plan will declare dividends on a
quarterly basis.
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Investment Objective
To provide investors long term capital appreciation along with the liquidity of
an open-ended scheme by investing in a mix of debt and equity. The
scheme will invest in a diversified portfolio of equities of high growth
companies and balance the risk through investing the rest in a
relatively safe portfolio of debt.
Asset Allocation
% of Portfolio of
Instrument Risk Profile
Plan A & B
Equities At least 50% Medium to High
Debt Instruments like debentures,
Up to 40%
bonds,khokhas, etc.
Not more than 10%
Securitized Debt of investments in Medium to High
debt
Money Market Instruments Balance Low
Scheme Highlights
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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
OBJECTIVES:
Population
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All the clients of State bank of India and State bank of Patiala
who are investing money in mutual funds and ulips, both.
• Sample Unit
• Sample Size
• Sampling Technique:
• Data Collection:
• Data has been collected both from primary as well as
secondary sources as described below:
• Primary sources
Primary data was obtained through questionnaires filled by
people and through direct communication with respondents in
the form of Interview.
• Secondary sources
The secondary sources of data were taken from the various
websites , books, journals reports, articles etc. This mainly
provided information about the mutual fund and ulips industry in
India.
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LIMITATIONS:
No study is free from limitations. The limitations of this study can be:
• Sample size taken is small and may not be sufficient to predict the
results with 100% accuracy.
• The result is based on primary and secondary data that has it’s own
limitations.
• The study only covers the area of Chandigarh that may not be
applicable to other areas.
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38%
yes
no
62%
INTERPRETATION:
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Recurring deposits
Others: 7
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expected
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18%
advertisement
44%
agents
14% seminar
workshops
24%
Interpretation: It means that all the modes of information are not the
same. Advertisement is more popular
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frequency
46%
government sector
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expected
at df(1), the table value is 3.841 which is greater than the calculated value.
Hence, H0 is accepted.
.
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frequency
34%
40% steadily
at an average rate
fast
26%
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frequency
8% 6%
28% safety of principal
low risk
high returns
28% maturity period
30% terms and conditions
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expected
at df(4), the table value is 9.488 which is less than the calculated value.
Hence , H0 is rejected
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Options frequency
Withdraw your money 8
Wait and watch 26
Invest more in it 16
frequency
16%
32%
withdraw your money
wait and watch
invest more in it
52%
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Interpretation: 26% of the respondents will wait and watch even if the
share market drops.
frequency
32%
Yes
No
68%
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Options frequency
Daily 15
Monthly 25
Occasionally 10
frequency
20%
30%
daily
monthly
occasionally
50%
Annual Total
Income
Below 1,50,000- 2,50,000- Above
1,50,000 2,50,000 4,00,000 4,00,000
Share No 12 3 3 6 24
Market
Yes 3 4 6 13 26
Total 15 7 9 19 50
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total 26 0 61 9.383
Expected=26/4= 6.5
expected
at df(3), the table value is 7.815 which is less than the calculated value.
Hence, H0 is rejected.
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frequency
22%
upto 5%
5-10%
52%
10% % above
26%
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frequency
22%
34%
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expected
at df(2), the table value is 5.991 which is greater than the calculated value.
Hence, H0 is accepted.
Interpretation: This shows that people normally tend to invest for longer
term. There’s not much of a difference between the various time
periods.
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Mutual funds
investing in bonds
18%
Mutual funds
6% investing in stocks
50% 3%
1% Balanced mutual
5% funds
4%
Individual stocks &
13%
bonds
Ulips
Other instruments
like real estate,
gold
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Ho is accepted.
frequency
27% 32%
Low
Moderate
high
41%
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If in the near future if you ever plan to invest in your money in any of
the mutual fund company, which would be your choice?
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frequency
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expected
At df(4), the table value is 9.488 which is greater than the calculated value.
Hence, H0 is accepted.
Interpretation: People mostly prefer all the brands equally for their
future investments.
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DEMOGRAPHICS
58% of people belong to 25-35 age group and on the other hand only
17% of people belong to above 40 age group.
8% are housewives.
5% are retired.
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A mutual fund is the ideal investment vehicle for today’s complex and
modern financial scenario. Markets for equity shares, bonds and
other fixes income instruments, real estate, derivatives and other
assets have become mature and information driven. Today each and
every person is fully aware of every kind of investment proposal.
Everybody wants to invest money, which entitled of low risk, high
returns and easy redemption. In my opinion before investing in
mutual funds, one should be fully aware of each and everything.
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FINDINGS
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RECOMMENDATIONS
The performance of the mutual fund depends on the previous years Net Asset
Value of the fund. All schemes are doing well. But the future is uncertain. So,
the AMC (Asset under Management Companies) should take the following
steps: -
1. The people do not want to take risk. The AMC should launch
more diversified funds so that the risk becomes minimum. This
will lure more and more people to invest in mutual funds.
2. The expectation of the people from the mutual funds is high. So,
the portfolio of the fund should be prepared taking into
consideration the expectations of the people.
3. Try tp reduce fund charges, administration charges and other
charges which helps to invest more funds in the security market
and earn good returns.
4. Diffferent campaigns should be launched to educate people
regarding mutual funds.
5. companies should give regular dividends as it depicts
profitability.
6. Mutual funds should concentrate on differentiating the portfolio
of their MF than their competitors MF
7. Companies should give handsome brokerage to brokers so that
they get attracted towards distribution of the funds.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
• www.amfiindia.com
• www.principalindia.com
• www.investorsguide.com
• www.moneycontrol.com
• www.mutualfundsindia.com
• www.sbimf.com
• www.sebi.co.in
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QUESTIONNAIRE
Yes No
Recurring deposits
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o Steadily
o At an average rate
o Fast
• Safety of principal
• Low risk
• High returns
• Maturity period
Yes ( ) no( )
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Yes ( ) No ( )
o Daily
o Monthly
o Occasionally
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If in the near future if you ever plan to invest in your money in any of
the mutual fund company, which would be your choice?
others ( )
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PERSONAL DETAILS
Name: ………………………………………………………………
Age Group:
Below 20
Between 20-30
Between 30-40
Above 40
Qualification:
Occupation:
Annual income:
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134