What You Need to Know About SWP

What You Need to Know About SWP


Where an investor has invested in a mutual fund (MF) scheme, he/ she can choose to withdraw a fixed sum of money, at regular intervals, for a fixed period or till the entire holdings are redeemed, using the Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) route.

When an SWP is set up against a particular MF scheme, the respective AMC redeems units at specified, regular intervals, as prescribed by the plan. The number of units redeemed will depend on two variables — NAV of the scheme as on the date of redemption and the SWP amount.

For example, you invest a lump-sum of ₹10 lakh in an MF scheme. Assuming the NAV at the time of purchase is ₹10, you will be allotted one lakh units. Two years later, you plan for an SWP and wish to withdraw ₹20,000 on the first of every month. As at the first month of SWP, let us assume that the NAV is at ₹12.5. Now, the AMC redeems 1,594.4 units (SWP amount of ₹20,000 divided by ₹12.5, NAV as on date of redemption). Assuming the NAV is at ₹12.7 for the second month of SWP, AMC redeems 1,578.6 units. This process continues every month till the end of the SWP period chosen by the investor.

Setting up SWP

If you are tech-savvy, log in to your demat account and choose the MF scheme from your portfolio, on which you plan to set up the SWP. Specify the amount to be withdrawn, number of withdrawals, frequency of withdrawals and the date on which it is to be withdrawn in the respective boxes and confirm the same. The same will have to be two-factor authenticated using CDSL t-pin to place the request.

On the offline route, investors have to submit an application/ form in this regard to the respective fund house/ distributor/ MF registrar.

While an SWP can be stopped anytime in the online route, an application/ form has to be filed for the same in the offline route. It normally takes between 7 and 21 days, in both cases, to process a request for an SWP or cancel it.

Tax efficiency

SWP is also a tax-efficient route to liquidate your MF investments. However, capital gains tax is attracted where the NAV on redemption exceeds the NAV on purchase. And based on the type of MF scheme and tenure for which the investments are held, the gains are classified as long-term or short-term capital gains.

Where you have held equity-oriented funds for more than a year, the redemption falls under the long-term bucket, and you get an exemption up to ₹1.25 lakh, beyond which the gains will be taxed at 12.5 per cent. Where the period of holding is less than a year, it is tagged as a short-term gain and taxed at 20 per cent.

Debt-oriented funds, on the other hand, are always taxed at marginal rates, while gold funds are taxed at slab rates if held for less than two years, while they are taxed at 12.5 per cent if held for more than two years.

Why SWP

SWP, while helping with regular cash flows, also ensures that the capital invested, adjusted for withdrawals, is still eligible for capital appreciation. This, similar to SIP, also ensures discipline and saves the capital from lump-sum, impulsive withdrawals.

To explain this with an example, assuming you make an one-time investment of ₹25 lakh and start an SWP from the succeeding month for ₹25,000 for 10 years, you will be left with a corpus of around ₹22.1 lakh after 10 years (after a gross withdrawal of ₹30 lakh), assuming an average return of 12 per cent over the period.





Source link

Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals unveils new kitchen appliance – Ameo Blend Nutri Blender

Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals unveils new kitchen appliance – Ameo Blend Nutri Blender


Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals has unveils its newest addition
to its kitchen appliance portfolio – the Ameo Blend Nutri Blender. The product meets the evolving needs of today’s consumers who seek solutions for their busy lifestyles, it fits seamlessly into small kitchens while supporting healthy food habits with Blend and Carry food grade Jars and multiple attachments like Sipper Cap and Storage Lid.

The Ameo Blend Nutri Blender, with its compact design and powerful features, is set to redefine the blending experience in households across India. The price of the product is Rs 4800 and is available at all
Crompton authorized retail outlets and leading ecommerce platforms.

Powered by Capital Market – Live News

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

First Published: Aug 23 2024 | 7:09 PM IST



Source link

Market regulator Sebi asks auditors to tread with caution with SMEs

Market regulator Sebi asks auditors to tread with caution with SMEs


Illustration: Binay Sinha


Whole-time member of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) Ashwani Bhatia on Friday sounded a cautionary note on listings and fundraising by small and medium enterprises (SMEs), amid instances of manipulation and fraudulent practices.


Speaking at a conference held by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), Bhatia stressed that such cases could have been prevented with diligent auditing.


His comments came after Sebi’s recent actions against several SMEs for flouting norms, manipulating financials, and engaging in fraudulent activities. The regulator has also found instances of the use of mule accounts to inflate IPO subscriptions and pricing.


The most recent order on Friday against Debock Industries showed fictitious transactions to inflate the balance sheet, and the use of preferential allotment to migrate to the mainboard, as well as siphoning off funds raised through a rights issue. Sebi has barred Debock Industries and its management from the securities market and ordered the impounding of illegal gains of Rs 89 crore.


“We simply do not like layering, we do not like money going to related parties, which a couple of years later you write off. It is very easy to monitor. We have seen transactions flowing on a single day to 10 different entities and coming back to the same company in layers. Be careful and be good partners to the entities you engage with,” Bhatia urged the auditors at the event.


The Sebi WTM also asked them to be vigilant and raise flags if they notice issues with financial numbers.


“Auditors need to be vigilant. There is an inherent conflict of interest in related party transactions — the directors are to manage the interest of the company and the interest of themselves and their friends. Mismanagement of this conflict of interest leads to diversion and siphoning off funds, ultimately benefiting the promoter companies at the cost of erosion of shareholder wealth. Auditors need to ensure that disclosures on RPTs comply with the law and spirit,” he added.


Bhatia also noted that despite easing delisting regulations, companies are not opting to go private due to high valuations. Instead, global firms are attracted to list in India. He added that the mutual fund industry, which currently commands an asset under management of Rs 65 trillion, could surpass the banking industry’s size. 


The market regulator has stepped up vigilance against SMEs, with the National Stock Exchange (NSE) tightening eligibility conditions for listing by including positive free cash flow to equity (FCFE) as a criterion. The change will be effective from September 1.


According to a notice issued on Thursday by NSE, SMEs must have a positive FCFE for at least two out of three financial years preceding their application for IPO to be eligible. The change will be effective from September 1. The calculations will also be made on the audited balance sheets.


Earlier, Sebi had extended the short-term additional surveillance measure (ST-ASM) framework to SME stocks which monitors the price and volume volatility. The exchanges have also imposed a 90 per cent cap on the price rise on listing day for SMEs.


The total number of listings on NSE Emerge has crossed 500 as of July with 22 new listings in the month. July saw the highest number of listings in a month with fund mobilisation of Rs 1,030 crore.

First Published: Aug 23 2024 | 6:47 PM IST



Source link

CPSE ETF: Take money off the table

CPSE ETF: Take money off the table


In a bull market, a rising tide lifts all boats. The CPSE Exchange Traded Fund (managed by Nippon India Mutual Fund) has been one such instance. With PSU stocks catching the market’s fancy, this ETF has seen its NAV more than double from ₹47 a year ago to over ₹102.8 now (August 21, 2024). This may be a good time for investors to book profits on this ETF and move to a more broad-based index fund or cash/debt, depending on their risk profile.

There are four reasons why we think it is best to exit this fund and lock into gains now.

Long-term record

Thanks to the stellar outperformance of PSU stocks in the last three years, the trailing returns of the CPSE ETF look attractive today, with one-year returns at 117 per cent, three-year at 60 per cent and five-year at 35 per cent, all ahead of the Nifty50. But the CPSE ETF’s performance has perked up only recently. If you took stock in August 2022, the five-year return on the CPSE ETF, at 6 per cent, was well below the Nifty50 return of 11 per cent. A rolling return analysis of the CPSE ETF since inception pegs its average rolling three- and five-year return at 8.8 per cent and 7.3 per cent, respectively. The fund’s history suggests that timely entry and exit are key to locking into good gains from it. This seems to be a good time to exit, given the outperformance over the last couple of years.

No coherent theme

Thematic funds deliver good results if there is a uniform set of drivers for the companies making up the theme — such as shifting consumer preference, favourable policy, cyclical upturn etc. But the CPSE ETF is made of a disparate set of companies with their only common thread being majority ownership by the Central government. The drivers for NTPC and NHPC, its power generation holdings, for instance, are bound to be quite different from those for NBCC (construction), ONGC (oil exploration), Bharat Electronics (defence) or Cochin Shipyard (ship-building). Yet all these stocks feature in this 11-stock portfolio.

The fund mirrors the Nifty CPSE Index. This index is run for the express purpose of facilitating the Centre’s PSU disinvestment programme. There is usually no pattern as to why the Centre picks some PSUs over others, when it prepares them for disinvestment. The stocks in the CPSE ETF can also get churned based on the Central Government’s disinvestment plans. In end-2017, the CPSE ETF had ONGC, IOC, Coal India, GAIL, Concor making up 78 per cent of its portfolio. Today, the top holdings are NTPC, PowerGrid, ONGC, Coal India and BEL making up 85 per cent.

Not value

When the two tranches of the CPSE ETF were launched in 2014 and 2017, PSUs were market under-dogs and were thus available at single-digit PEs. Now, however, after a concerted re-rating, many PSUs are no longer value-buys. This has reflected in the CPSE ETF too. Regulated return PSUs such as NTPC and Powergrid have climbed to valuations of 19-20 times, compared to single-digit PEs before. Stocks such as Bharat Electronics, NBCC, Cochin Shipyard and SJVN now trade at pricey PEs of 52-75 times. Sectors that offer pockets of relative value within PSUs such as banks and financial firms, do not feature in the CPSE portfolio.

What’s more, the CPSE ETF portfolio is not diversified in the true sense, with energy and utilities making up 66 per cent of the assets, industrials 18 per cent and other stocks 15 per cent. All companies making up this basket are subject to cyclical earnings, with strong linkages to the economy. After stellar growth over FY24, the economy is likely to see more moderate growth this year, putting the CPSE portfolio at risk of an earnings slowdown.

Alternative routes

Of course, the PSU universe still offers some pockets of attractive opportunity. Some PSUs have reported operational turnarounds in recent years and are high dividend yield candidates. But investors would be better off owning such stocks directly, instead of trying to own their PSU exposures through an ETF over whose composition they have little control.

The CPSE ETF managed assets of ₹46,793 crore by end-July 2024. It had a very reasonable expense ratio of 0.07 per cent.

Why book profits





Source link

Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals unveils new kitchen appliance – Ameo Blend Nutri Blender

TCC Concept acquires majority stake in Natural Environment Solutions


TCC Concept has allotted 1,29,79,648 equity shares of the company having face value of Rs. 10 each at an issue price of Rs. 352 per share on preferential basis by swap against 15,752 equity shares of Natural Environment Solutions at a ratio of 824:1 to the 122 equity shareholders (including person belong to member of Promoter/ Promoter Group of the
Company) of Natural Environment Solutions.

Further, the Board of Directors of Natural Environment Solutions (NES) has approved the transfer of 15,752 equity shares from 122 investors to TCC Concept. As a result, NES has become a 99.25% subsidiary of the company.

NES is creating its niche position in the fastest growing India data center industry and setting up 5 MW capacity Data center at Hinjewadi,
Pune and over next 3 years, NES plans to set up and/ or operate more than 100 MW Data center capacity in India. NES has developed their skill set over couple of years of experience in building data center related
infrastructure. NES has also developed certain unique designs which could create Mini Data centers to meet the demands of Edge Computing and making those data centers closer to the source so that to provide
best data experiences to the consumers.

Powered by Capital Market – Live News

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

First Published: Aug 23 2024 | 6:38 PM IST



Source link

CARE Ratings settles CRA rules violation case with Sebi; pays Rs 13 lakh

CARE Ratings settles CRA rules violation case with Sebi; pays Rs 13 lakh


SEBI(Photo: Shutterstock)


CARE Ratings Ltd on Friday settled a case pertaining to alleged violation of Credit Rating Agencies (CRA) rules with markets regulator Sebi after paying Rs 13.05 lakh.


The order came after CARE Ratings filed an application with Sebi proposing to settle the proceedings initiated against it, “without admitting or denying the findings of facts” through a settlement order.


“In view of the acceptance of the settlement terms and the receipt of the settlement amount…the instant adjudication proceedings initiated against CARE Ratings Limited is disposed of in terms of…the Settlement Regulations,” Sebi said.


The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had initiated adjudication proceedings against CARE Ratings Ltd for alleged violation of a clause related to ‘Monitoring and Review of Ratings by Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs) specified under CRA Regulations.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Aug 23 2024 | 6:34 PM IST



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp