Fincare Small Finance Bank files Rs 1,330-cr IPO papers with Sebi, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, May 9 () Digital lender Fincare Small Finance Bank has filed preliminary papers with capital market regulator Sebi to raise Rs 1,330 crore through an initial share-sale. The initial public offer (IPO) comprises fresh issue of equity share of the bank worth Rs 330 crore and an offer for sale aggregating up to Rs 1,000 crore by promoter Fincare Business Services Limited, according to the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP).

This offer includes a reservation for subscription by employees.

The bank would utilise net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmenting its Tier-1 capital base to meet future capital requirements. Further, a small portion of the proceeds will be used towards meeting the expenses in relation to the offer.

Under the terms of the RBI final approval and the small finance bank (SFB) licensing guidelines, the lender is required to list its equity shares on the stock exchanges within a period of three years from reaching a net worth of Rs 500 crore.

The Bengaluru-based MFI-turned small finance bank started operations in July 2017. Before converting into a small finance bank, Fincare Small Finance Bank largely conducted business from two entities – Disha Microfin focused on the western region and the south-focused Future Financial Services.

On May 3, Motilal Oswal Private Equity (PE) announced that it has picked up a minority stake in Fincare Small Finance Bank through a secondary acquisition worth around Rs 185 crore (USD 25 million).

The investment was through India Business Excellence Fund-III, a fund managed and advised by Motilal PE.

ICICI Securities, Axis Capital, IIFL Securities, SBI Capital Markets and Ambit Private Limited have been appointed as merchant bankers to advise the SFB on the IPO.

The equity shares of the lender will be listed on BSE and NSE.



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IBA CEO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (NARCL), the name coined for the bad bank announced in the Budget 2021-22, is expected to be operational in June.

Bad bank refers to a financial institution that takes over bad assets of lenders and undertakes resolution.

The new entity is being created in collaboration with both public and private sector banks, Indian Banks’ Association Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Sunil Mehta said.

“Various preparatory work is going on and we hope that it should be operational next month. The biggest advantage of NARCL would be aggregation of identified NPAs (non-performing assets).

“This is expected to be more efficient in recovery as it will step into the shoes of multiple lenders who currently have different compulsions when it comes to resolving a bad loan,” he said.

NARCL will take over identified bad loans of lenders, Mehta said. He added that the lead bank with offer in hand of NARCL will go for a ‘Swiss Challenge’, where other asset reconstruction players will be invited to better the offer made by a chosen bidder for finding higher valuation of an NPA on sale.

The company will pick up those assets that are 100 per cent provided for by the lenders, he added.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Budget 2021-22 announced that the high level of provisioning by public sector banks of their stressed assets calls for measures to clean up the bank books.

“An Asset Reconstruction Company Limited and Asset Management Company would be set up to consolidate and take over the existing stressed debt,” she had said in the Budget speech. It will then manage and dispose of the assets to alternate investment funds and other potential investors for eventual value realisation, she added.

Last year, IBA had made a proposal for creation of a bad bank for swift resolution of non-performing assets (NPAs). The government accepted the proposal and decided to go for asset reconstruction company (ARC) and asset management company (AMC) model for this.

Mehta further said NARCL will pay up to 15 per cent of the agreed value for the loans in cash and the remaining 85 per cent would be government-guaranteed security receipts.

The government guarantee would be invoked if there is loss against the threshold value, he added.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has said that loans classified as fraud cannot be sold to NARCL. As per the annual report of the RBI, about 1.9 lakh crore of loans have been classified as fraud as on March 2020.

To facilitate smooth functioning of asset reconstruction companies, the RBI last month decided to set up a panel to undertake a comprehensive review of the working of such institutions.

After enactment of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act in 2002, regulatory guidelines for ARCs were issued in 2003 to enable development of this sector and to facilitate smooth functioning of these companies.

Since then, while ARCs have grown in number and size, their potential for resolving stressed assets is yet to be realised fully.



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CBDT Made Available Offline Utility Of ITR 1 & 4, Check Steps To File

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Taxes

oi-Vipul Das

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For the Assessment Year 2021-22, the Income Tax Department has launched the Income Tax Return (ITR) Offline utility for taxpayers. For the time being, the department has allowed this utility service available to ITR-1 and ITR-4. The utility is built on the “JSON” technology, which is a quite new technology and allow taxpayers to file returns with greater accuracy and convenience. It can import and pre-fill data from an electronic filing portal. The balance details can be filled in and other than PAN data, you can update profile information in the utility; though, it is recommended that you modify it in your profile on the e-filing platform and retrieve pre-fill records. The e-filing platform does not allow you to upload your ITR. You can either fill it out and save it within the utility or export it as a json file to your device. You can upload the records to the e-filing platform once the filing is allowed. Pre-fill data relevant to tax payments, Upload of ITR, Questionnaire-based features to help you determine through ITR is relevant to you, Payment of taxes through this utility, and Tool to check and upload ITR through the utility itself are some of the add-ons and other ITRs that will be available in future updates. To file ITR 1 and ITR 4 follow the steps covered below:

CBDT Made Available Offline Utility Of ITR 1 & 4, Check Steps To File

Steps to file ITR 1 and 4

  1. Once you’ve logged in to the e-filing site, go to ‘Downloads’, then ‘Offline Utilities’, and then ‘Income Tax Return Preparation Utilities’ to get the Utility.
  2. A ZIP file will start installing on your device once you press the link for the Utility provided against ITR-1 or ITR-4. From the extracted folder open the Utility by double-clicking on it.
  3. Open the Utility from the extracted folder after extracting the downloaded utility as a ZIP file. Now select “Run Anyway” from the dialogue box.
  4. Once you select “Run Anyway,” your utility will begin to download, and you can then continue to file your ITR.
  5. You will be redirected to the homepage once you download the utility. To complete your Income-tax Return for the AY 2021-22, click “Continue.”
  6. If you’re filling out the return for the first time, go to the “File returns” tab. If you’ve already started filing your return, you can view the draft version in this tab and press “edit” to view all of the pre-filled ITR details you’ve previously imported into the utility.
  7. Choose the radio button for “Import pre-filled data” after clicking “File returns.” This choice allows you to import pre-filled data from your system in.json format to pre-fill the details in the income tax return with a single click.
  8. Select the “Assessment year” and press “Proceed” after entering the “PAN” with which you wish to fill out the return. Only the assessment year 2021-22 is available.
  9. After logging in to the e-Filing site, go to ‘My Account -> ‘Download Pre-Filled for AY 2021-22’ to download the pre-filled JSON which can be imported into the utility to pre-fill personal and other relevant details. Click “proceed” after attaching the pre-filled JSON file from your system.
  10. You will be redirected to the “Income Tax Returns” page upon clicking Proceed in the previous screen, where you can see the Basic pre-filled data from the imported JSON file. To continue, click “File Return.” Finally, select the Status that applies to you and press “Continue.” The status field will be pre-filled with details of the previous year and is customizable.
  11. Choose the ITR form you want to file from the dropdown menu and click “Proceed.” In a future update of the offline utility, a user-friendly questionnaire to determine ITR applicable to you will be available.
  12. To continue filling out your return, click “Let’s get started.”
  13. Fill in all of the ITR form’s applicable and necessary fields, validate all the ITR form’s sections, and the tax will be determined.
  14. You can preview and submit your Return once you’ve confirmed all of the schedules. By pressing the respective buttons, you can either “Download” or “Print” the preview. You can save the Preview to your device. It will be available in PDF format to save on your computer.
  15. To check the Return, click “Proceed to validation.”
  16. Keep in mind that the individual must validate all errors before being allowed to “Download JSON.” Simply click on the error, and you’ll be guided to the appropriate error.



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Profit jumps 78% to Rs 128 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: IDFC First Bank on Saturday reported a 78 per cent jump in net profit at Rs 128 crore for the fourth quarter ended March 2021. The private sector lender had posted a profit of Rs 72 crore during the corresponding January-March quarter a year ago.

Total income during the fourth quarter rose to Rs 4,834 crore as against Rs 4,576 crore during the same period of FY20, IDFC First Bank said in a regulatory filing.

On the asset front, the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) or bad loans as a percentage of gross loans as on March 31, 2021, increased to 4.15 per cent from 2.60 per cent by year ago same period.

At the same time, net NPAs too rose to 1.86 per cent as against 0.94 per cent in March 2020.

As a result provision (other than tax) and contingencies rose to Rs 603 crore as compared to Rs 412 crore in the same quarter a year ago.

In Q4 FY21, the bank released Rs 324 crores from provisions made for one telecom account based on mark to market value of the instruments and made additional provisions of Rs 375 crore for COVID-19 which is carried forward to the next financial year for the unprecedented situation arising due to COVID-19 second wave in India, it said.

For the full year 2020-21, the bank posted a profit of Rs 452 crore as against loss of Rs 2,864 crore in the previous fiscal.

Total income during the year rose to Rs 18,221.5 crore from Rs 18,029.7 crore in the previous year.

“Including the equity capital of Rs 3000 crore raised through QIP on April 6, 2021, our overall capital adequacy is strong at 16.32 per cent. We maintain high levels of liquidity with liquidity coverage ratio of 153 per cent,” IDFC First Bank MD V Vaidyanathan said.



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Provisions for MFI loan write-offs lead Bandhan Bank to post 80% drop in Q4 net, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bandhan Bank on Saturday reported an 80 per cent dip in its March quarter net profit at Rs 103 crore, as it wrote off a huge portfolio of loans in the flagship microlending business by recognising stress upfront. The bank’s post-tax profit for FY21 also reduced by 27.1 per cent to Rs 2,205 crore as a result of the hit to the business in the last quarter.

Its managing director and chief executive C S Ghosh said the bank wrote off Rs 1,929 crore of loans, a bulk of them in the microfinance segment, in the March quarter because it wanted to start the new fiscal with a clean balance sheet.

As a result of the accelerated write-off, the bank’s overall provisions shot up to Rs 1,594 crore from the year-ago period’s Rs 827 crore, which had a direct impact on the profit line. Operating profit, which is arrived at by excluding the provisions, was up 13 per cent to Rs 1,729 crore.

Its chief financial officer Sunil Samdhani said performance of the last 3-6 months was assessed before taking a call on the write-offs, and added that most of these accounts are contact-based businesses like beauty parlour, gym, school bus owner.

The bnak had restructured less than Rs 200 crore of advances in the year-ago period, and most of the loans which were written-off in the reporting quarter were microloans, he said.

Additionally, Bandhan Bank also restructured over Rs 600 crore of advances, which were majorly from the home loan book, he said, adding that with such accounts, it has got greater possibility of an account normalizing if its defers the repayments.

The gross non performing assets ratio improved to 6.8 per cent as against 7.1 per cent in December, including the proforma NPAs.

If one were to include the impact of the write-offs and NPAs, the overall repayments for the bank stand at over 98 per cent, Ghosh said, pointing out that the troubles in two key markets of West Bengal and Assam, arising due to factors like the state elections, a local law in Assam and the second wave of the pandemic, have subsided, with both the states showing collection performance at over 90 per cent.

Ghosh said that Bandhan Bank will suffer some reductions in repayments over the next two months because of the second wave induced localised lockdowns in many states.

Samdhani, however, said that the reverses on the overall economic climate front will not impact its loan growth in FY22 because advances growth mostly happens in the second half of a fiscal starting October every year. The bank, which posted a 27 per cent rise in advances for FY21, did not share an advances growth target.

The core net interest income rose by only 4.6 per cent during the reporting quarter to Rs 1,757 crore despite the advances growth. Restricting the growth was a Rs 538 crore interest reversal on recognitions made in the past on assets which turned NPAs after the Supreme Court order on asset classification, which also reduced the net interest margins by 1 percentage point to 7.8 per cent.

The non-interest income grew 57.4 per cent to Rs 787.3 crore during the quarter.

From a business growth perspective, de-risking has been prime on the agenda with limited network expansion in West Bengal and Assam, Ghosh said.

The bank has turned 11 of its training centres into COVID-care facilities to accommodate 700 beds and is also donating 500 oxygen concentrators, he said.

The overall capital adequacy ratio of the bank stood at a healthy 23.5 per cent, and was down when compared with the 27.2 per cent in the year-ago period.

The bank scrip had gained 0.80 per cent to close at Rs 297 a piece on Friday’s trade on the BSE, as against gains of 0.52 per cent on the benchmark.



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CSB Bank posts highest-ever net profit in FY21 at Rs 218 cr; Q4 net at Rs 43 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: Private sector CSB Bank on Saturday posted an all-time high net profit of Rs 218.40 crore for the fiscal ended March 2021. “The bank recorded an all-time high net profit of Rs 218.40 crore in FY21 as against Rs 12.72 crore in FY20, an increase of 1,617 per cent,” CSB Bank said in a regulatory filing.

During the last quarter ended March of FY21, the lender reported a net profit of Rs 42.89 crore against a loss of Rs 59.70 crore in the same quarter of 2019-20, CSB Bank said.

Total income during the reported quarter grew to Rs 609.45 crore as against Rs 475.49 crore in the same period a year ago. Interest income moved up by 28 per cent to Rs 497 crore.

The full-year income too increased to Rs 2,273.11 crore in FY21 from Rs 1,731.50 crore in FY20. Interest income during the year was at Rs 1,872 crore as against Rs 1,510 crore.

Bank’s asset quality improved as the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) fell to 2.68 per cent of the gross advances as of March 31, 2021 as against 3.54 per cent by end of March 2020. In absolute value, the gross NPAs or bad loans amounted to Rs 393.49 crore, compared with Rs 409.43 crore a year ago.

Net NPAs also fell to 1.17 per cent (Rs 168.81 crore) from 1.91 per cent (Rs 216.94 crore).

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies were down in Q4FY21 at Rs 70.95 crore as compared with Rs 84.32 crore parked aside in the year-ago period.

CSB Bank said its advances grew by 27 per cent mainly contributed by gold loan growth of 61 per cent.

Deposits at end of March this year grew to Rs 19,140 crore as against Rs 15,791 crore a year ago, while the advances were up at Rs 14,438 crore as against Rs 11,366 crore.

Total business has grown by Rs 6,421 crore or by 24 per cent year-on-year, it said, adding, thus in the centenary year the bank has grown a fourth of the total business it grew in past 99 years.

The lender said it has a comfortable liquidity position with liquidity coverage ratio of 210.39 per cent which is well above the RBI requirement.

“While the industry grew by approx 12 per cent in deposits and 6 per cent in advances, we could outperform by recording 21 per cent and 27 per cent growth in deposits and advances, respectively. In terms of overall business, bank has grown a fourth…We could also open 101 branches in this 101st year of existence. In terms of profitability, we could break all the past records by crossing the Rs 200 crore mark,” said C V R Rajendran, Managing Director & CEO, CSB Bank.

He said gold loans, two wheeler loans, agri loans, MSME abd SME loans will continue to be the main focus areas of the bank.

While digital will be the main mantra, the bank also plans to add close to 200 branches to its network in FY22 so that there is proper mix of brick and click banking, Rajendran said.

“Though we may have to wait for a month or so to fully understand the impact of second wave of Covid-19, we are optimistic in our outlook to continue the good work in FY22 as well,” he added.



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Profit rises 13% to Rs 78 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private lender DCB Bank on Saturday reported a 13 per cent increase in net profit to Rs 78 crore for the January-March quarter compared to that of Rs 69 crore in the year-ago quarter. Total income of the bank during the January-March quarter of 2020-21 fell to Rs 971 crore from Rs 1,012 crore in the same quarter of 2019-20, DCB Bank said in a regulatory filing. The income from interest as well as from investment fell during the reported quarter from a year ago.

For the FY2020-21, the bank’s net profit remained nearly flat at Rs 336 crore against Rs 338 crore in FY20. Income also was a tad down at Rs 3,917 crore in FY21 against Rs 3,928 crore in FY20.

The bank’s asset quality worsened with the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) spiking to 4.09 per cent of the gross advances as of March 31, 2021, as against 2.46 per cent by the end of March last year.

In value terms, the gross NPAs stood at Rs 1,083.44 crore, significantly higher than Rs 631.51 crore in the year-ago period.

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies in Q4FY21 came down to Rs 101.18 crore from Rs 118.24 crore a year earlier. Net NPAs stood at 2.29 per cent (Rs 594.15 crore) as against 1.16 per cent (Rs 293.51 crore).

On returning the compound interest to eligible borrowers post the Supreme Court final order in March and subsequent the RBI notification, the lender said it is in the process of account by account calculation of interest relief due to the eligible customers.

In the meantime, as of March 31, 2021, the bank has created liability towards estimated interest relief of Rs 10 crore and reduced the same from the interest income.

The bank said it held contingency provision of Rs 229.11 crore against the likely impact of Covid 19 regulatory package, impact of the conclusion of the interim order (of Supreme Court on not declaring accounts as NPAs till August 31, 2020 and after) and other contingencies.

On the impact of second wave of the pandemic, it said under the current circumstances the bank during March quarter, on a prudent basis, has made a contingency provision of Rs 124 crore towards further likely impact of Covid-19 on restructured and stressed assets.

“In addition to this contingency provision of Rs 124 crore, the bank also holds floating provision amounting to Rs 108.80 crore, besides, provisions for standard assets and specific non-performing assets,” it said.

Besides, the amount in overdue categories where the moratorium or deferment was extended as of March 31, 2020 was Rs 1,908.08 crore at end of March this year, it said. The provisions held on these by the end of September 2020 was Rs 68 crore and similar amount was kept as provisions adjusted against slippages (NPA and restructuring), DCB Bank said.

The lender also said that its board has not recommended any dividend for fiscal ended March 2021 in view of the situation developing around Covid-19 in the country and the related uncertainty that it creates.



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IDBI Bank’s officers, employees’ unions urge Government to drop proposal on stake sale

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The United Forum of IDBI Officers and Employees said its members may resort to industrial action if the Government does not drop its proposed move to sell IDBI Bank to a strategic buyer.

“We fervently urge upon the Government of India to drop its contemplated move to sell IDBI Bank to a strategic buyer, failing which the Officers and Employees will be left with no other option but to take recourse to organizational forms of action which on our part are anxious to avoid at this juncture,” the Forum’s Joint Convenors Ratnakar Wankhade and Vithal Koteswara Rao A.V., said in a letter to the Finance Minister.

The Government and the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) together own 94.72 per cent of equity of IDBI Bank (Government: 45.48 per cent and LIC: 49.24 per cent). LIC is currently the promoter of IDBI Bank with management control and Government is the co-promoter.

The Forum demanded that the Government put in place stringent measures for recovering the Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) and fix accountability on all the concerned for the burgeoning NPAs and mammoth “write offs”.

The Joint Convenors observed that the request made by Unions and Associations repeatedly to initiate criminal proceedings against willful defaulters of Bank Loans has not been implemented by the Government so far.

“In case of sale of IDBI Bank to a strategic buyer. The private sector entities who will become the owners of the Bank will no longer be interested to cater to the needs of common man and general public with zero balance Savings Bank accounts,” the Forum said.

Various products/schemes of Government of India meant for common man and general public cannot be offered through a Bank owned by private entities, it added.

“Private Banks will be profit-oriented. We may be forced to collect minimum balance charges and other penalties from common man and general public to get more profits,” the Joint Convenors said.

They emphasised that India needs more Government Banks to improve financial inclusion parameters/aspects.

“Reduction in the number of Government Banks leads to less competition, which is nothing but monopoly. This is totally against the interest of the common man and general public,” the Forum said.

The Forum underscored that given that LIC is the promoter and Government is the co-promoter of IDBI Bank, common man and general public have continued their faith in the Bank because of which its deposits stood at Rs.2,30,898 crores as on March-end 2021.

“In case of sale of IDBI Bank to a strategic buyer, the hard-earned money of common man and general public will be at great risk,” the Joint Convenors said.

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IDFC First Bank Revises Interest Rates On FD, Check New Rates Here

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Investment

oi-Vipul Das

|

With impact from May 1, private sector lender IDFC First Bank has modified interest rates on fixed deposits (FDs). Short-term FDs are available from seven days to one year, and long-term FDs are available from one to ten years at IDFC First Bank. For deposits with a term of 7 days to ten years, IDFC First Bank offers interest rates ranging from 2.75 percent per annum to 6 percent per annum after the latest revision. IDFC First Bank pays a 2.75 percent interest rate on FDs with terms of seven to fourteen days. The bank offers a 3.50 percent interest rate for 15-29 days and a 3% interest rate for 30-45 days. 4.00 percent on deposits maturing in 46-90 days, and 4.50 percent on deposits maturing in 91-180 days. IDFC First Bank offers 5.25 percent for FDs maturing in 181 days or less than a year. The bank pays 5.50 percent on term deposits for a maturity period of one or two years. IDFC First Bank also offers 5.75 percent for 2 years 1 day – 3 years. Long-term deposit interest rates at IDFC First Bank range from 6% to 5.75 percent for 3 to 5 year deposits and 6% to 5.75 percent for 5 to 10 year deposits.

IDFC First Bank Revises Interest Rates On FD, Check New Rates Here

Jana Small Finance Bank Revises Interest Rates On FD, Check New Rates Here

IDFC First Bank FD Rates

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
7 – 14 days 2.75% 3.25%
15 – 29 days 3.00% 3.50%
30 – 45 days 3.50% 4.00%
46 – 90 days 4.00% 4.50%
91 – 180 days 4.50% 5.00%
181 days – less than 1 year 5.25% 5.75%
1 year – 2 years 5.50% 6.00%
2 years 1 day – 3 years 5.75% 6.25%
3 years 1 day – 5 years 6.00% 6.50%
5 years 1 day – 10 years 5.75% 6.25%
Source: Bank Website

Note

The bank has also cut its savings account interest rates as of May 1st. For those with deposits under Rs 1 lakh, IDFC First Bank will pay 4% interest after the most recent adjustment. The interest rate will be 4.5 percent for those who have a balance between Rs 1 lakh and Rs 10 lakh. Those with a balance of between Rs 10 lakh and Rs 2 crore will get the maximum interest rate of 5% respectively.



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2 High Rated Small Cap Funds That Gave 1-Year Returns Over 100%

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Investment

oi-Vipul Das

|

Small-Cap Funds invest a large portion of their actively managed corpus in small-cap company, equity or equity-related securities, and undoubtedly they have also exploded in popularity in recent years among the investors. A small cap company is classified as one with a market capitalization of less than Rs. 500 crores. This means that small-cap mutual funds have a better chance of outperforming the benchmark. It’s important to remember that small-cap funds are high-risk investments. These stocks, on the other hand, have a tremendous opportunity to have incredible returns. Small-cap stocks are very vulnerable to market fluctuations. As a result, when the market falls, these stocks are likely to suffer the most. As a result, when investing in Small-Cap Funds, it is pertinent to have a long-term investment period to ensure that the investment has enough time to generate decent returns. Small-cap funds are preferred if you have a high risk profile and a long investment period. Keeping all these factors in mind we have covered here the top 2 small cap funds which are rated 4-5 star by Value Research/CRISIL and have generated 1-year returns over 100%.

2 High Rated Small Cap Funds That Gave 1-Year Returns Over 100%

Kotak Small Cap Fund

This fund has generated a return of 125.13% in the last 1 year, whereas the fund’s 3-year return and 5 year return have been 16.70% and 20.09%. The assets under management (AUM) of Kotak Small Cap Fund Direct-Growth is Rs 3.423 crores, and the latest NAV is Rs 138.21 as of 7 May 2021. The fund has a 0.60 percent expense ratio. Chemicals, Engineering, Construction, Metals, and FMCG make up the majority of the fund’s holdings. Century Plyboards (India) Ltd., Sheela Foam Ltd., Carborundum Universal Ltd., Supreme Industries Ltd., and Persistent Systems Ltd. are the fund’s top five holdings. This fund has been rated 4-star by Value Research which is acceptable.

ICICI Prudential Small Cap Fund Direct Plan Growth

ICICI Prudential Small Cap Fund Direct Plan-Growth has Rs 2,065 crores in assets under management (AUM) and a current NAV of Rs 40.38 as of May 7, 2021. The expense ratio of the fund is 0.83 percent. The bulk of the capital in the fund is invested in the sectors of services, construction, financial, engineering, and technology. Mahindra Lifespace Developers Ltd., V-Mart Retail Ltd., INOX Leisure Ltd., Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd., and KPIT Technologies Ltd. are the fund’s top five holdings. This fund has also performed admirably among the best small cap funds in terms of one-year returns. The fund has also given a decent return of 109.55% across the last 1-year, while the 3 and 5 year returns of the fund is 10.86% and 15.89% respectively. The fund is rated 4 star by CRISIL and 3 star by Value Research.

1-5 Year Returns

Fund 1 Year Returns 3 Year Returns 5 Year Returns Rating
Kotak Small Cap Fund 125.13% 16.70% 20.09% 4 star by ValueResearch
ICICI Prudential Small Cap Fund Direct Plan Growth 109.55% 10.86% 15.89% 4 star by CRISIL
Source: Groww

Goodreturns take

Small Cap Funds give you insight to smaller companies that have the capacity to grow into mid- and large-sized businesses in the potential. Small caps, on the other hand, can be highly unstable in the short term, specifically if market dynamics are unfavourable. That being said, if you keep invested for a long period, you may outperform the benchmark. Small cap mutual funds are highly volatile, and you must exercise strict caution while investing in small cap funds. The above discussed funds may yield good returns only if you have a higher risk-tolerance and want to invest for long-run. But if you have a lower risk-profile and want to get risk-free returns than Public Provident Fund (PPF), Bank FDs, RBI Taxable Bonds can be a good bet here.



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