Saturday, 21 January 2017

Best ELSS (Tax Saving Mutual Fund) to Invest in 2017



ELSS (Equity Linked Saving Scheme) or Tax Saving Mutual Funds are one of the best investment options for tax saving u/s 80C. These ELSS funds invest mainly in equities making them one of the best investments for long term wealth creation.

Why Invest in ELSS?
High Returns: Of all the tax saving investments ELSS has the potential to give highest returns.
Tax Free on Maturity: The gains made on redemption are long term capital gains (on equity) and so tax free.
Lock-in Period: The ELSS funds have lock-in period of 3 years which means once invested you cannot redeem them before completion of 3 years. This is the shortest lock-in compared to all other tax saving investments.
Buy/Redeem Online: You can buy most of Tax saving mutual funds online directly from company website. Also the redemption can be done online and the amount is directly credited to your bank account. This gives lot of convenience.

ELSS – The Cons:
Returns are Unpredictable: ELSS invests in equities and so the returns from these funds are linked to stock market performance. There are times when your money gets more than double in 3 years and also on the other side there can be significant loss. So it’s a high risk investment. However if you choose the right ELSS funds you can expect 10% to 12% returns in long term of 7 to 10 years.

Best ELSS Funds to Invest:
Once you are convinced about investment in ELSS funds, the next question is which fund to choose? Believe me it’s not easy thing to do. On the last count there were 41 open ended ELSS funds. To add to it there are several closed ended funds launched in January to March for last minute tax savers. Also most publications come out with their “Best Tax Saving Mutual Funds” list every year – which unfortunately keeps on changing.
As the ELSS returns are linked to stock market no one can predict the returns for next 3 years. So it’s all guessing game based on historical data. We too give you five ELSS funds based on their historical risk/returns balance, consistency of returns, etc.
The funds are in alphabetical order. Choose any one or two:
1.       Axis Long Term Equity Fund
2.       Birla Sun Life Tax Plan
3.       Franklin India Taxshield
4.       ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund
5.       Invesco India Tax Plan

ELSS – Historical Performance
The table below shows the 1, 3 , 5 and 10 year performance of selected ELSS Funds. Historically they have given decent returns.
Description: ELSS Fund – Historical Performance
ELSS Fund – Historical Performance
Best ELSS Funds (by Popular Publications):
As mentioned earlier most financial publications come out with their set of recommended ELSS. We list them down
Mint
Economic Times
Value Research
§  Axis Long Term Equity
§  Invesco India Tax Plan
§  ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund
§  Axis Long Term Equity Fund
§  Birla Sunlife Tax Relief 96
§  DSP Blackrock Tax Saver Fund
§  Franklin India Tax Saver Fund
§  Axis Long Term Equity Fund
§  Birla Sun Life Tax Relief 96
§  Franklin India Taxshield Fund
§  IDFC Tax Advantage Fund
§  ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund
§  Invesco India Tax Plan
§  Reliance Tax Saver Fund
§  Tata India Tax Savings Fund

ELSS – Points to Keep in Mind while Investing
1. If possible Invest “DIRECT” in ELSS funds. (LearnHow to invest “Direct” in Mutual Fund) If you use broker or invest through intermediaries, your return would come down by 0.5% to 1% every year due to commission paid to them. The table below shows the difference in returns in 3 years.
Description: ELSS Fund Performance – Direct Vs Regular investment in 3 years
ELSS Fund Performance – Direct Vs Regular investment in 3 years

2. Minimum Investment of Rs 500 – the minimum investment is Rs 500 and it can be increased in multiples of Rs 500 only. So you cannot buy ELSS funds for Rs 4300 but can buy for Rs 4,000 or 4,500 (i.e. multiples of Rs 500)

3. Never invest in closed ended ELSS schemes which are miss-sold in the name of tax saving especially in January to March

4. Select ONE or TWO ELSS funds for investment. Do NOT over diversify in multiple ELSS funds.

5. Invest in ELSS in sync with your other investments and overall investment plan.

6. You may want to do SIP than invest in lumpsum. This would help you make regular investment throughout the year.

7. It’s NOT necessary to redeem these ELSS funds after 3 years. It can remain invested as long as you want.

8. After 3 years you can redeem and then buy again the same fund to get tax benefit for that year. (Assuming the tax laws remain same till then)

9. Choose growth option for long term wealth creation.

10. Dividend reinvestment option is not available for ELSS Funds.


Regards,
MALAY SHAH
9987994497


Thursday, 29 December 2016

Why to increase sip amount in your Mutual funds.


Do you want to increase the SIP amount for your mutual funds ? Or you want to keep it constant always ? A lot of people start with a SIP amount at first and then look forward to increase SIP amount later. This is a very common of every investor and its “how to increase sip amount”

Increase SIP amount

When we say “SIP”, it generally means constant SIP, which does not increase every year. When we calculate SIP amount using any SIP Calculator – the SIP value is generally very high and does not look realistic and at times and such high investment can trigger affordability issue. However there is a clear solution for this, which is used by financial planners and that’s called “Increasing SIP”, where one starts the SIP with a lower amount and then gradually increases them year on year. This looks more realistic as one’s income also increase overtime and ability to invest increases. We see this situation a lot while working with our clients under financial coaching program.
Let me show you the example : Ajay wanted to accumulate 5,00,00,000 (5 crores) for his retirement which is 25 yrs away. When he calculates the SIP amount, it’s coming around Rs 31,000 (assuming 12% returns from equity). Now it’s not possible for Ajay to invest Rs 31,000 every month, as it’s a very high amount. Rather he is fine if he can start with a small amount today and then increase it every year as his income would also increase with time. This is called as Increasing SIP model. If Ajay is ready to increase his SIPs by 10% every year, then he has to start with just Rs. 13,500. This amount is much more convenient for Ajay to arrange, rather than Rs 31,000 per month.

Should you increase SIP amount or not ?

At the first look, a general conclusion which comes into mind is that Increasing SIP is better than Constant SIP because it is much convenient and looks logical that investment should rise as the income increases. But there are different angles through which both the options can be looked at. Let’s look at two important points one by one.

1. Investment required in case of Increasing and Constant SIP

One of the most important factor one can judge both the situation is the amount of investment needed. If we take the above example we just discussed, one would need to start SIP of 31,000 per month to accumulate 5,00,00,000 in 25 yrs assuming 12% return. Now this amount will be constant throughout the all 25 yrs. Where as one can choose to start his SIP with Rs 13,500 and then increase it by 8% per year, but in this increasing SIP model, his SIP amount would reach 50,000 in 18th year and 85,000 in 25th year, which might look very big in numbers, but years from now, it would be worth a small amount considering the purchasing power of money and the annual income one earns. So don’t get surprised by numbers.
SIP amount increase
One should opt for increasing SIP, when his situation really does not allow him to invest a big amount and he is very sure that he would be able to increase his investments in tune with his salary increase. Truly speaking I am in favour of Constant SIP if one’s situation permits because that way you are investing more in the start of your life and that would help you keep your SIP in check later on in life. Imagine after many years in life, you have to just invest the same amount where as your Income has risen 3X. Isn’t it a big relief and freedom to do whatever you want from your money at that time. Imagine your salary is Rs 50,000 per month and you do SIP of 10,000 and even after 10 yrs, when your salary has risen to say 1.5 lacs per month and you are still doing SIP of Rs 10,000 only. I would choose to pay a little more today and then get into that kind of situation.
Most of the people who are not able to go for constant SIP, because of high SIP amount is because they are very late in investments and now their goals are near and they have less time for compounding. These people have high expenses already in life. Had they started long back when they started earning they could be in a better situation now. Below is the table which shows the Increasing and Constant SIP amounts required for the example discussed above and shows you the ratio of increasing and constant sip. You can see how it started with 44%, but rose to 203% later after 25 yrs.
Increase SIP amount

Conclusion

One should start his SIP’s early so that he can keep his SIP’s constant through-out the tenure. If you are late, then your SIP amount will be very high and will look unrealistic and then you will have to increase your Systematic Investment plan (SIP) amount in future if you want to reach the goals.

2. How the corpus will grow in case of Increasing and Constant SIP

The other major thing to look is how your over all corpus would grow in both the cases. Note that in constant SIP and increasing SIP, the final corpus is getting accumulated and they reach the same point at end, but in case of Constant SIP, the overall Corpus is always higher than the increasing SIP and it’s because you are investing higher amount in the start and that way the compounding factor is in your favour. See the chart below which shows, how the gap between the two narrows down at the end of the tenure and both the cases lead to same corpus.
Systematic investment plan money increase
If you look at the table below, you will see that the maximum difference between the two is 36,00,000 in 17-18th year and after that the difference starts coming down (not so clear in table , you need to calculate it) . As you are starting with lower amounts in increasing SIP, the overall corpus is obviously going to be less, but it’s very much above 50% all the time, so if you are saving for long-term, you should be interested in the final corpus.
SIP corpus growth
Note that the example and charts above are assuming a 25 yr old tenure and equity returns of 12%. The numbers would change depending on tenure and the equity return, but the overall conclusions discussed above remains same. For a shorter tenure like 4-5 yrs, the constant SIP and increasing SIP won’t differ a lot; it would be a small number.
So the conclusion is that one should keep on increasing their mutual funds SIP amount as and when they can , preferably every year. So are you ready to increase sip amount ?

Friday, 16 December 2016

Unified Payment Interface (UPI)

Unified Payment Interface (UPI), launched by National Payments Corporation of India has been gone live few months back. Several banks have already announced the launch of their UPI-enabled apps, which can be used by both customers of the respective banks or an account holder of another bank to transact payments.

Say, for example if I have installed the updated version of my HDFC Bank mobile app then from there I can add multiple bank accounts of mine - of all the banks which are now registered with UPI.

Here is how it works:

Steps for Registration:

Download the UPI app of your bank (or a third party app like PhonePe) from the Play Store. When you search UPI in Play Store, the list will show all registered banks' apps. Choose your bank"s app. Then install/update the app.

We all have been transferring money through NEFT/RTGS/IMP from long time. For that we used to require payee's bank account details like a/c no. and IFSC code. But with UPI to transfer money you don't require all those.

All you require is two things
(1) VPA  (Virtual Payment Address)

(2) MPIN

(1) Open the app and click on UPI icon there. Create UPI profile by entering details like name, answer to secret question etc. While creating UPI profile, it will ask you to choose your VPA. The format is always like below:

Your_chosen_VPA_Name@yourbank

For example my VPA is amisandip@hdfcbank

If the name you chosen for your VPA is not available then choose some other name which is available.

Go to “Add/Link/Manage Bank Account” option and links the banks and account numbers with your VPA.

(2) For registering or generating M-PIN:

Click on MPIN icon after you have successfully created your profile.

After you have entered last 6 digits of your debit card number and expiry month and year you will receive a One Time Password (OTP) from the issuer bank on your registered mobile number. 

Enter OTP and choose your preferred numeric MPIN and clicks on ‘submit’. Done.

How a UPI transaction is performed?

PUSH – Sending money using virtual address (VPA)

Log on to UPI application

After successful login, select the option of Send Money/Payment

Enter beneficiary’s/Payee virtual id (VPA) and amount and select your account to be debited.

You will get confirmation screen to review the payment details and clicks on ‘Confirm’.

Enter MPIN

Get ‘successful’ or ‘failure’ message.

So if you want to transfer me some money, all you need is my VPA - that's it.

PULL – Requesting money

Log in to the bank’s UPI application.

After successful login, select the option of collect money (request for payment)

Enter remitters/payer’s virtual id (VPA), amount and account to be credited i.e. your a/c no.

You will get confirmation screen to review the payment details and clicks on confirm.

The payer will get the notification on his mobile for request money.

Payer now clicks on the notification and opens his banks UPI app where he reviews payment request.

Payer then decides to click on accept or decline.

In case of accept payment, payer will enter his MPIN to authorise the transaction.

Payer gets ‘successful’ or ‘decline’ transaction notification.

Payee/requester gets notification and SMS from his bank for credit in his bank account.

And its done......



Regards,
Malay Shah

Saturday, 10 December 2016

Closing your PPF after 5 yrs is possible now [NEW RULES]


Recently the PPF closure rules got changed and now a PPF account can be closed prematurely after 5 yrs itself, but only in some conditions which we will see in this article.
Till now, as per the old rules, the PPF account had a lock in period of 15 yrs, and in no case it was possible to close the account other than the death of the subscriber itself.
So death was the only valid reason to close the PPF account before 15 yrs maturity period.

PPF premature closure rules

As per the recent rule change by the govt, ppf closure before 15 years is now possible. You can close a PPF account if it’s at least 5 yrs old, in following 3 cases
Case #1 – Death
If the PPF holder dies, then the account can be closed anytime (even before 5 yrs) and the nominee/legal heirs can claim the amount from Govt.
Case #2 – Life Threatening illness
The PPF account can also be closed in case, the money is required for curing the serious ailment or a life threatening disease of following people
  • PPF subscriber himself/herself
  • Spouse
  • Dependent Children
  • Dependent Parents
Note that one has to provide the documentary evidence from a competent medical authority. So you will need to share the proof that you need to undergo some big treatment/surgery etc and you will need money for that.
Case #3 – Higher Education
If money is required for the higher education for the PPF subscriber or the minor on whose name the account is opened, then one can pre-close the PPF account. However one has to produce the fee bills and the proof of admission or any other documentary evidence.

Here are the exact notification wordings
PPF pre-closure notification

Penalty of 1% when you close PPF account before maturity

This pre-close feature comes with a penalty of 1% of interest for each year. What it means is that for all the years since your PPF account is opened, you will get 1% less interest for each year. So if you earned 8.7% for a particular year, your calculation will be done @7.7% and this way for each period 1% will be reduced.
Govt has issued an example calculation for penalty of 1% . But the question now is does 1% penalty mean 1% less amount in final corpus after pre-closure?
No, the answer is 4.88% !
Yes, You get 4.88% less corpus due to this pre-closure penalty of 1% . But this is true for that example only which is given by govt in their notification. I went deeper and did the exact calculation and here are the results.
ppf pre-closure example
The reason why there is a good amount of difference is that there is the compounding of penalty in this example. If you check the balances in 3rd year, you will see there is difference of 2.1% . And it keeps on increasing as the number of years increase.
Which means, Older the PPF account, the higher is the final penalty for you.
It does not make a lot of sense to close the PPF account before maturity once 10 yrs is passed, as the penalty will be higher than 4-5% if most of the cases.

PPF pre-closure rule will help investors

PPF is one of the widely popular financial products in India. Majority of families have at least one PPF account and given it’s a long term product, there is a good amount of money lying in it. Now with this new pre-closure rule, an investor gets the benefit of closing the PPF account if they want to do it.
But the only issue is that it’s not an emergency solution to the problem as the documentation requirement is there and being a govt product, you can expect a slow response while closing down the PPF account and using the money.
Please share what do you feel about this new change in PPF closure rules?

Regards,
Malay Shah

Thursday, 24 November 2016

Today we all need to transfer money at sometime or other. What are the options available?

Well, the answer is – NEFT, RTGS, IMPS.
NEFT – Through NEFT when we transfer money, it gets processed in batches. Means what? Say, I transfer money using NEFT at 10:10 a.m., you transfer at 10:20 a.m., Mr. ABC transfers at 10:45 a.m. All our transactions over a period of 1 hour will get processed in one single batch. So beneficiary’s a/c will not get credited immediately. Here there is no minimum amount, but maximum amount could be 10 lakhs. Timing: 8:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. (MON to FRI) and 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. (SAT)
RTGS – Through RTGS when we transfer money, it gets processed immediately. That is why the name Real Time Gross Settlement. Here there is minimum amount 2 lakhs, maximum amount could be 10 lakhs. Timing: 8:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. (MON to FRI) and 8:15 a.m. to 01:45 p.m. (SAT).
IMPS – Through IMPS when we transfer money, it gets processed immediately. That is why the name Immediate Payment Service. Here there is no minimum amount, but maximum amount could be 2 lakhs. Timing: 24X7, 365 days. There are two ways one can send money through IMPS – either by using beneficiary’s a/c no. and IFSC – or by using beneficiary’s mobile number and MMID.
Charges – Better to check your bank’s website as charges can differ. But mostly the charges for NEFT and IMPS are similar when transaction amount is above Rs. 10,000. Below this amount NEFT charges Rs. 2.50 + S.T. and IMPS charges Rs. 5 + S.T.
Malay Shah