Fixed Income Funds - Invest Online |
River crossing, or parking or holding period return, is a rampant practice that takes place mostly at the financial year end when mutual funds connect with cash-rich entities to tide over redemption pressure. Regulators normally consider the practice imprudent since it raises investor risk.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is now taking all trade data from MFs, including on CDs and interscheme transactions. There are some outlier trades in the first week of October, which raise suspicion, three people familiar with the matter told ET.
This time the redemption pressure was somewhat higher in the middle of the year, triggered by the Amtek Auto fiasco.
In September, CD rates spiked about 25 basis points across maturities as banks aggressively raised money to shore up deposits ahead of quarterly earnings.
But the rates slid after RBI's rate cut exceeded estimates. At the same time, mutual funds, the biggest buyers of CDs, faced redemption pressure in liquid and ultra short-term funds as lenders wanted to avoid setting aside any extra capital for mutual fund exposure to maintain a good capital adequacy ratio.
Intermediaries or brokers connected with a few cash-rich entities -corporates or bankers -which extended funding support to MFs by temporarily buying CDs at higher rate than normal. Beginning next quarter (October), the financial entities will sell back CDs to MFs at a predetermined price, that could give the financing institute gains of 10-20% in annualised return for 5-10 days. For instance, state-owned Syndicate Bank's CD maturing mid-December traded at a high of 7.61% against a normal rate of 7.05% on October 1, said two market sources. On October 5, Andhra Bank and Axis Bank CDs yielded 7.63% each, with both maturing in November-end.
It is unwise for mutual funds to participate in this practice," said Dhirendra Kumar, CEO of mutual fund portal Value Research. "The gains are few and if something goes wrong, the potential damage to reputation is immense. Showing higher assets for a few days can hardly be a big achievement
Best Tax Saver Mutual Funds or ELSS Mutual Funds for 2015
1. BNP Paribas Long Term Equity Fund
2. Axis Tax Saver Fund
3. IDFC Tax Advantage (ELSS) Fund
4. ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund
5. Religare Tax Plan
6. Franklin India TaxShield
7. DSP BlackRock Tax Saver Fund
8. Birla Sun Life Tax Relief 96
9. Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund
10. HDFC TaxSaver
Invest Rs 1,50,000 and Save Tax under Section 80C. Get Good Returns by Investing in ELSS Mutual Funds Online
Invest in Tax Saver Mutual Funds Online
For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call
---------------------------------------------
Leave your comment with mail ID and we will answer them
OR
You can write to us at
PrajnaCapital [at] Gmail [dot] Com
OR
Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300
No comments:
Post a Comment