Friday, August 26, 2011

Did You Know | MF transaction charge is not compulsory

Sebi has given the option to distributors to either charge or opt out of charging it to their investors
The transaction charge on mutual funds (MFs) that the capital market regulator, Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), has allowed the agents to impose on their investors is not compulsory. Sebi has given the option to distributors to either charge or opt out of charging it to their investors.

Compensating agent’s efforts

After U.K. Sinha took over as Sebi chairman in February, he constituted a committee to suggest measures to “revive the Indian MF industry”. Sebi accepted this committee’s recommendations and introduced a transaction charge of Rs100 that distributors can charge to investors for every subscription of Rs10,000 and above. If you invest in an MF for the first time, you will be charged Rs150 for every subscription of Rs10,000 and above and then Rs100 for subsequent investments.

However, since Sebi has given the option to agents to charge or not to charge, there’s a good chance that your agent may not collect this fee. Market sources say that many agents who work in metros and big cities such as Mumbai, Delhi and Ahmedabad will not collect this fee. For starters, many such large and established agents feel that this fee is too small. Also, after the entry loads were abolished, many large distributors changed the way they do business and started accepting charges directly from investors, as per Sebi’s August 2009 advice. Internet transaction portals such as www.fundsindia.com and www.fundsupermart.co.in have categorically stated that they will not impose transaction charge. So you need to ask your agent whether or not he will levy transaction charges at the time of investment.

Braving dual policies

Sebi has clarified that agents will have to follow a uniform practice when dealing with their clients. In simple words, if your agent chooses to levy transaction charge, he will have to collect the same from all his clients. He cannot charge one client, and choose to exempt another.

However, if your agent is a sub-broker and works for more than one broker (main agent at the umbrella level), there could be a problem. If one of his main agents opts for the transaction charge and the other one opts out, he can charge investors who are registered under the first agent and exempt those registered under the second. This is because the decision to charge or not charge—in a broker and sub-broker business model—lies in the hands of the main agent as the main agent’s ARN (Association of Mutual Funds in India, or Amfi, registration number) code goes on the MF investment form. Amfi tells us that in this case, the agent (sub-broker) will ultimately need to decide who he wants to align with; the agent (main broker) who charges or doesn’t charge the transaction charge.

Source: http://www.livemint.com/2011/08/25205715/Did-You-Know--MF-transaction.html?h=B

Household savings hit 13-year low; dip to 9.7% of GDP

India's household savings, which have fuelled growth over the last few years, have dropped to below 10% of gross domestic product, or national income, for the first time in 13 years, as soaring inflation ate into disposable incomes.

Net financial savings by Indians, which include deposits with banks and non-banking finance companies, cash, investment in stocks, debentures and small savings instruments besides life insurance, provident fund and pension funds, dipped to 9.7% of GDP in FY11 compared with 12.1% a year ago, as per data released by the Reserve Bank of India on Thursday. "This is because household financial liabilities have risen," according to Deepak Mohanty, executive director, RBI.

The central bank has attributed the decline to slower growth in bank deposits and life insurance funds as well as an absolute decline in investment in equities, mainly driven by redemption of mutual fund units.

The last time net financial savings as a percentage of GDP dipped below 10% was in 1997-98 when it fell to 9.6%.

What has really impacted savings by individuals and small businesses is rising prices.

Higher prices have forced them to spend more on daily expenses and also on loan repayments.

Headline inflation was over 8% in FY11, which forced the RBI to raise rates aggressively, but the latest data confirms that rising prices have hurt households, with a higher share of disposable incomes being marked for spending rather than salting it away as has been the trend during the past few years. With negative returns on deposits in real terms because of high inflation and sharp slide in stocks, there could have been reallocation of financial savings to non-productive assets such as gold.

Powered by an annual average growth of over 8% between 2004 and 2008-09, India's savings rate surged to over 30% of GDP, including both physical and financial assets. This fuelled investments in the economy, thus helping reduce dependence on foreign capital.

India, along with China, had seen a secular trend in savings growth over the last decade with consumers saving more as incomes rose in keeping pace with economic growth. However, rising inflation has impacted this with the burden of higher loan repayments after several bouts of rate increases.

The RBI, in its annual report released on Thursday, said households' financial liabilities have risen reflecting higher borrowings from commercial banks. Besides, persistently high inflation, relatively slower adjustment of bank deposit rates, and volatility in Indian equity markets - impacted by global macroeconomic uncertainties - affected the level and composition of net financial savings of the household sector, it said.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/household-savings-hit-13-year-low-dip-to-9-7-of-gdp/articleshow/9739157.cms

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