Monday, January 11, 2010

IDFC MF Unveils Monthly Income Plan

IDFC Mutual Fund has launched a new fund named as IDFC Monthly Income Plan, an open ended fund of funds scheme. The New Fund Offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 10 per unit. The new issue is open for subscription from 11 January 2010 and closes on 9 February 2010.

Investment Objective:
The primary objective of the scheme is to generate regular returns through investment primarily in debt oriented mutual fund schemes (such as Income and Liquid funds). The secondary objective of the scheme is to generate long-term capital appreciation by investing a portion of the scheme's assets in equity oriented mutual fund schemes.

Options:
The scheme offers dividend and growth option. Dividend option offers payout, reinvestment and auto sweep as its sub option.

Asset Allocation:
IDFC Monthly Income Plan will allocate 65% to 100% of assets in units of mutual funds investing in debt / liquid / income funds and up-to 25% of assets in units of mutual funds investing in equity funds with high risk profile. It would further allocate up-to 15% of assets in money market instruments with low to medium risk profile

Minimum Application Amount:
The minimum investment amount is Rs 5,000 and in multiples of Re 1 for Non SIP and in multiples of Re 0.01 for switches. Additional ongoing purchase (Non SIP) - Rs 1,000 and in multiples of Re 1 thereafter. For SIP purchase Rs 1,000 which is subject to minimum of 6 installments of Rs 1,000 each.

Minimum Target Amount:
The fund seeks to collect a minimum subscription (minimum target) amount of Rs 1 crore under the scheme during the NFO period.

Load Structure:
There shall be no entry load in the scheme. Exit load charge of 1% of the NAV shall be applicable if investors who redeem / switch out such investments within 365 days from the date of subscription applying First in First Out basis, (including investments through SIP/STP). No exit load shall be applicable for switches between options of the schemes.

Benchmark:
The Scheme's performance will be benchmarked against CRISIL MIP Blended Index.

Fund Manager:
Ashwin Patni will be the fund manager for the scheme.

Source: http://www.apollosindhoori.cmlinks.com/MutualFund/MFSnapShot.aspx?opt=9&SecId=10&SubSecId=22,24

Ban on Entry load cuts churn in MF schemes

The ban on entry load (the fees charged from investors for entering a scheme) has brought some sanity in mutual fund (MF) distribution. The move has ensured a drastic reduction in portfolio churning from the levels seen in 2006-07.

While there is no data to prove it, sales heads at asset management companies say the incidence of investors shifting schemes frequently has gone down substantially.

Distributors and independent financial advisors (IFAs) admitted that this was rampant some time ago but not now, as it had become less rewarding due to the ban on entry load.

Portfolio churning had become a serious issue, with a section of distributors advising investors to churn funds frequently just to earn more commission. During the entry-load regime, fund houses used to give distributors heavy incentives. This meant distributors recommending even schemes not suited to an investor’s risk profile.

“A section of the distribution community was obviously doing it. But in the last four-five months, we have not noticed frequent shifting of schemes. The number of transactions and the overall business have been quite muted, but from the investment pattern that we have observed, retail investors are now more focused on performance than switching funds. Churning has come down significantly,” said the national sales head of a mutual fund.

One of the regulator’s motive in scrapping the entry load was to stop these activities. However, mis-selling continues, with distributors and smaller IFAs giving preference to insurance than mutual funds as the former earns them more commission. However, instances of distributors asking investors to switch funds within a span of days has come down.

“The revenue model has changed. It is not viable for distributors to do that now because the incentive has gone. The average holding period for our investors in equity funds who come through the SIP (systematic investment plan) route is 12 months, which we expect to go up as investors mature. There is much more awareness among retail investors now,” said Puneet Kapoor, head of products at Kotak Mahindra Bank.

The churn has also come down because the number of IFAs selling MFs has gone down significantly. After the ban on entry load kicked in from August 1, industry estimates suggest that close to 70 per cent of IFAs shunned MF distribution. For agents in tier-II towns, it did not make sense to sell MFs because they could not survive on margins of 50-60 basis points to 1 per cent.

“Logically speaking, churning should have come down, but there are no figures to support it. The main reason for churning portfolios frequently has been done away with. The flow of NFOs (new fund offers), one of the major reason for the churn, has died down and there is not much enthusiasm now, as shown by the collection of recent offerings. Retail investors have become more mature and the level of awareness has risen sharply. Investors now question the logic of investing in a particular scheme”, said Vineet Arora, head of product & distribution at ICICI Securities.

Investors pulled out Rs 1,109 crore from equity funds in November. Since August, the category has seen net outflows of Rs 5,130 crore. But, analysts say that most of it is profit-booking and not necessarily portfolio churning. The latter would have meant some inflows coming back, which has not happened as there have been net outflows for the past few months.

Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/banentry-load-cuts-churn-in-mf-schemes/382200/

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)