‘We are in process to setup small finance bank which will take over PMC Bank’, says RBI in Delhi HC, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India on Monday said it has given “in-principle” approval to one Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL) to set up a small finance bank (SFB), which will take over the beleaguered Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC Bank) very soon.

After the submission, Senior Counsel Jayant Mehta representing RBI sought time to file an affidavit in this regard.

The Bench of Justice DN Patel and Justice Jyoti Singh on Monday, after taking note of the submission on behalf of the RBI adjourned the matter for August.

Advocate Shashank Deo Sudhi who appeared for the petitioner submitted that more than five dates had been given and the hardship money had not been released. He further submits that the common depositors are condemned to lead humiliated lives without any money at the time when the depositors are in the need of money.

The interim application was filed in the pending petition filed by Bejon Kumar Misra, challenging withdrawal limits in Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank.

Earlier, RBI in a response filed in Delhi High Court stated that depositors are already allowed to withdraw up to Rs 5 lakh on hardship grounds for treatment of terminal illnesses, including treatment of COVID-19. It is the duty of Punjab Maharastra Cooperative (PMC) to pay hardship amount to the eligible depositors as per directions of RBI and subject to availability of liquidity with that bank.

To expedite the process, the authority for approving the payment under hardship grounds has also been delegated to the PMC Bank, states RBI reply in Delhi High Court.

Earlier, Delhi High Court had directed the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Punjab Maharashtra Cooperative Bank and other respondents to consider the needs of the depositors during the coronavirus-induced lockdown. The RBI had capped the deposit withdrawal limit at Rs 40,000 and restricted the activities of the PMC Bank after an alleged fraud of Rs 4,355 crore came to light.

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has seized and identified movable and immovable assets worth more than Rs 3,830 crore owned by HDIL in connection with the case.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

‘We are in process to setup small finance bank which will take over PMC Bank’, says RBI in Delhi HC, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India on Monday said it has given “in-principle” approval to one Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL) to set up a small finance bank (SFB), which will take over the beleaguered Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC Bank) very soon.

After the submission, Senior Counsel Jayant Mehta representing RBI sought time to file an affidavit in this regard.

The Bench of Justice DN Patel and Justice Jyoti Singh on Monday, after taking note of the submission on behalf of the RBI adjourned the matter for August.

Advocate Shashank Deo Sudhi who appeared for the petitioner submitted that more than five dates had been given and the hardship money had not been released. He further submits that the common depositors are condemned to lead humiliated lives without any money at the time when the depositors are in the need of money.

The interim application was filed in the pending petition filed by Bejon Kumar Misra, challenging withdrawal limits in Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank.

Earlier, RBI in a response filed in Delhi High Court stated that depositors are already allowed to withdraw up to Rs 5 lakh on hardship grounds for treatment of terminal illnesses, including treatment of COVID-19. It is the duty of Punjab Maharastra Cooperative (PMC) to pay hardship amount to the eligible depositors as per directions of RBI and subject to availability of liquidity with that bank.

To expedite the process, the authority for approving the payment under hardship grounds has also been delegated to the PMC Bank, states RBI reply in Delhi High Court.

Earlier, Delhi High Court had directed the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Punjab Maharashtra Cooperative Bank and other respondents to consider the needs of the depositors during the coronavirus-induced lockdown. The RBI had capped the deposit withdrawal limit at Rs 40,000 and restricted the activities of the PMC Bank after an alleged fraud of Rs 4,355 crore came to light.

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has seized and identified movable and immovable assets worth more than Rs 3,830 crore owned by HDIL in connection with the case.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

More Indians trust banks with their personal data than US, UK and Australia: Report

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


According to the survey data, 68 per cent Indians surveyed said that they trust their banks with personal data.

Data privacy has been questioned many times and it has been noted that many people have been reluctant to give out their personal details. In such times, it was found that more Indians trust their banks while handing out their personal data. The confidence among Indians with banks having their personal data is more than people in nations like the US, UK and Australia, said MoneyTransfers, taking in account data provided by YouGov. The survey was conducted across counties to establish which countries have the most and least trusted banking services.

According to the survey data, 68 per cent Indians surveyed said that they trust their banks with personal data. Similar response (68 per cent) was received from Germany too where people trusted banks. Both countries were placed on the third rank in comparison to other countries as “they believe banks and financial service providers are competent and ethical in their management of personal data.”

The trust factor was found to be higher than in countries like Australia and the US, UK where 57 per cent, 45 per cent and 59 per cent people, respectively, had faith in their banks when it comes to providing personal data.

It is to note that Poland was the top country where 85 per cent of the people have put their trust in banks and financial service providers with their personal data. This was followed by Indonesia, where 70 per cent of people were confident that banks and financial service providers can diligently handle their personal data. Other countries surveyed included China, France, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Mexico, United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong and Singapore.

While conducting the survey, people were simply asked if they trust banks and financial service providers with their personal data. More than 2,250 individuals from each country were given the survey questions and asked about their trust in banking services.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Telangana coop bank bags Nabard award

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


TSCAB bags Nabarad’s award

Telangana State Cooperative Apex Bank (TSCAB) has been chosen the best state cooperative bank (SCB) in the country by National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard).

Nabard supports Telangana with ₹20,000 crore during 2020-21

The Karimnagar District Cooperative Credit Bank (DCCB), too, has been recognised as the best district cooperative credit bank (DCCB) in South India, as part of the awards announced by Nabard on its 49th foundation day celebrations.

Co-operative banks must put in place an outsourcing policy: RBI

Of the 33 SCBs and 353 DCCBs in the country, Nabard had short-listed six SCBs and 45 DCCBs based on their performance for the last three years, TSCAB said in a release.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI to HC, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Monday told the Delhi High Court that it has given in-principle approval for setting up a small finance bank that will take over the scam-hit PMC Bank soon. A bench of Justices D N Patel and Justice Jyoti Singh granted time to the RBI to file an affidavit on the development in the matter and listed the case for further hearing on August 20.

Senior advocate Jayant Bhushan, representing the RBI, submitted that it has given in-principle approval to Centrum Finance Services Ltd to set up a small finance bank that will take over Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank very soon as the process is near completion.

He said this will ease the trouble faced by the bank’s customers who are unable to withdraw their money.

The court was hearing an application by consumer rights activist Bejon Kumar Misra seeking directions to the RBI to consider other needs of PMC Bank depositors such as education, weddings and dire financial position, not just serious medical emergencies as being done at present.

The application was filed in Misra’s main PIL seeking directions to the RBI to ease the moratorium on withdrawals from the PMC Bank during the coronavirus pandemic.

Advocate Shashank Deo Sudhi, representing Misra, submitted that more than five dates have been given to the authorities and the hard-earned money of the depositors has not been released.

At least senior citizens are allowed to withdraw their money up to Rs 5 lakh as they are suffering from hardship and the depositors are unable to withdraw their own money.

The high court had earlier said that according to the Supreme Court‘s decision on withdrawal of money by depositors of PMC bank for exigencies, exceptions can be carved out for urgent medical and educational requirements.

The court had asked the depositors, whose needs have been highlighted before the court in a PIL, to once again approach the RBI-appointed administrator of PMC bank giving details of their financial needs along for medical or educational reasons within three weeks.

RBI had earlier argued that while it sympathises with the plight of the depositors, everyone would have some or other financial emergency; and if Rs 5 lakh was released to all, as provided in case of medical emergencies, the bank would be in difficulty and depositors would not get their entire deposits back.

RBI had said it was trying to keep the bank functioning in the interests of the depositors and had floated an expression of interest for investing in it and has received some bids.

The PMC Bank has been put under restrictions, including limiting withdrawals, by the RBI, following the unearthing of a Rs 4,355-crore scam.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

4 Auto Stocks To Buy As Economic Momentum Gathers Steam

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Tata Motors

One of the top stock picks from the auto space is Tata Motors as Emkay Global believes that the Automobile sector is underpinned by expectations of a strong cyclical upturn which is expected to last at least three years. The brokerage now has a target of Rs 400 on the stock of the auto giant, which is almost a 32% upside from the current levels.

“Tata Motors is likely to see a muted quarter, with revenue growth at +2% CAGR on forex translation gains and higher realizations in JLR. Wholesale volumes are weak in JLR (-10% CAGR) and standalone (-9% CAGR) divisions. We expect ramp-up in dispatches in both JLR and standalone divisions in H2,” the brokerage firm has said.

Emkay Global also sees EBITDA margin to contract to 1% from 5.5% in Q1FY20. “Margin contraction of 570bps qoq is likely due to commodity inflation and lower scale,” the brokerage has said.

Motherson Sumi Systems

Motherson Sumi Systems

Motherson is one of the top auto ancillary companies and has over 270 facilities operating in 41 countries across North America, South America, Europe, South Africa, Middle East, Asia Pacific and Australia.

In the auto ancillary space, Motherson Sumi Systems is one of the stocks that Emkay Global is the most bullish on. The firm has set a solid robust target of 38% upside from the current levels of Rs 238.

According to the brokerage revenues of Motherson Sumi Systems are estimated to witness growth at +5% CAGR. “On qoq basis, revenues should increase by 5% due to growth in automobile production in Europe and US PV segments. EBITDA margin should expand to 10.3% from 6.8% in Q1FY20. Margin is likely to expand marginally by 10bps qoq due to higher scale,” the brokerage has said. The shares of Motherson Sumi were last trading at Rs 238 on the NSE.

Ashok Leyland

Ashok Leyland

This is another stock with a “buy” rating from Emkay Global. The firm sees an upside possibility of 24% on the stock from the current levels.

According to the firm, revenue is likely to decline at -30% CAGR. “Volumes to decline at 33% CAGR, but realizations are likely to increase at +4% CAGR. Sequentially, realizations should decrease by 3% due to adverse mix (lower share of MHCVs). EBITDA margin should contract to -3.2% from 9.4% in Q1FY20. Margin contraction of 1,080bps qoq is likely due to lower scale,” the brokerage has said.

Shares in Ashok Leyland were last seen trading at Rs 125.45 on the National Stock Exchange.

HeroMoto Corp

HeroMoto Corp

The brokerage has a 34% upside target on 2-wheeler major HeroMoto Corp. The brokerage believes that volumes are likely to recover sequentially in Q2, supported by pent-up demand and the marriage season. The firm has set a robust price target of Rs 3,870 on the stock.

According to Emkay Global revenues are expected to decline at -15% CAGR, led by lower volumes (-25% CAGR).

“Realizations are likely to increase at +14% CAGR. On qoq basis, realizations should increase by 3% on price hikes and better mix. EBITDA margin should contract to 11% from 14.4% in Q1FY20. On qoq basis, margin contraction of 290bps is likely due to commodity inflation and lower scale,” the brokerage has said.

Shares of HeroMoto Corp were last seen trading at Rs 2,909 on the BSE.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

Views mentioned herein are taken from the brokerage report of Emkay Global Financial Services. Neither the author, nor the brokerage nor Greynium Information Technologies would be responsible for losses incurred based on the article. Please consult a professional advisor. Investing in stock markets is risky.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Axis Floater Fund: A Good Debt Fund Option For Those Looking To Park Surplus For Short Term

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Investment

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

The NFO is the most suitable way to apply for the newly launched mutual fund and is similar to an IPO of a company that is making its way to the Indian exchanges. Usually, for the NFO, the offer price is fixed at Rs. 10 while after the period expires, investors need to apply for the mutual fund at the fund’s Net Asset value.

Now before we get into the specific details of this newly launched Axis Floater Fund, we will understand what the floater fund is.

Axis Floater Fund NFO Opens Today: Should You Invest?

Axis Floater Fund: A Good Debt Fund Option For Those Looking To Park Surplus For Short Term

Floater funds:

Floater funds are typically debt funds provided with a mandate to invest 65% of their corpus in floating rate bonds. Interest rate on these bonds changes with the interest rates in the economy. These bonds are typically suitable for investors looking for securities or investment options that do not erode their primary capital. Prices of fixed rate bonds have an inverse relationship with changes in interest rates – as interest rates rise, prices of bonds fall and vice versa.

How floater funds generate return for investors?

Floater funds with their corpus into fluctuating interest bearing debt securities do not play with the investors’ capital, instead provide return depending on the floater bond securities rate. So, as and when there are changes by the RBI in its key policy rate, they may get a lower or higher rate accordingly.

This floater fund has been unveiled at a time when

1. Economy is recovering from the second Covid wave at a relatively better rate:

• There is reported a pick -up in high frequency data
• Pent up demand is restoring normalcy at the demand front in the country.
• Q4 FY 21 GDP numbers also highlight latent growth attributes as a direct after effect of the 1st wave. Same attributes likely to show up in Q1 FY 22 GDP figures. And as restrictions are being withdrawn we are at the cusp of a fresh economic cycle.

2. At the bottom of the interest rate cycle:

With inflation rising, the centre is left with no scope to cut rates further and in all likelihood rates will only move northwards. This is even as the system liquidity remains at all time high.

3. Yields have started to rise where they were most hurt:

Across Government securities (G-securities) and credit curves there is seen normalization of the yield curve and the hike is more pronounced where the rates were cut the most. This is to an extent aided by RBI’s various intervening measures.

Axis floater fund NFO and its various features:

Axis floater fund NFO and its various features:

Axis Floater fund is an open ended scheme investing pre-dominantly in floating rate securities.

1. Floating rate fund

2. Fund manager is Mr. Aditya Pagaria

3. NFO opens- July 12, 2021

4. Minimum application is Rs. 5000 and in multiples of Rs. 1 thereafter

5. Primary investments: These funds invest in floating rate bonds and as these floating rate bonds adjust as per market interest rate on a periodic basis, the prices of these bonds do not follow the same price/yield relationship. There shall be no allocation to ‘A’ rated instruments or below.

6. Investment horizon: The fund targets average maturity of between 6-18 months and hence a good bet for those looking to park surplus for short term. It targets a portfolio average maturity of 6-18 months. Minimum of 12-18 months.

Where will Axis floater fund invest?

Where will Axis floater fund invest?

To invest predominantly in floating rate instruments (including fixed rate instruments converted to floating rate exposures using swaps/derivatives). So, primarily the fund will look for 80% AAA/A1 holding along with 20% allocation to AA issuers.

Who should invests in Axis Floater funds?

Who should invests in Axis Floater funds?

Those investors who do not want to see their capital/ investment to be impacted and look to reduce their risk can diversify their portfolio by allocating some portion into floater funds for getting good return in the short run. Axis floater bond in particular offer a market linked return and are best for those looking to hedge interest rate risks in a rising rate environment.

The fund can also convert a fixed rate bond exposure into a market linked floating rate exposure thereby reducing any interest rate risk associated with the fixed rate instrument. This can be explained as per the example illustrated in the NFO prospectus:

Say: Fund says a fixed rate bond with a coupon of 5.25%. Then fund also contracts an investment bank for swapping the bond for a floating structure and the counterparty agrees to provide a MIBOR +3% payout structure for the swap in exchange for the fixed coupon of the bond.

It is to be noted that yield rate hike shall be sharper for 3-5 year segments as these tenures saw the most compression in the previous cycle. So, a gradual rate hike is in the offing over the medium term.

Return and other advantages of Axis floater fund

Return and other advantages of Axis floater fund

– Fund’s investment into AA issuers currently offer yield at par with longer maturity AAA papers.

– Government’s support to the credit market is making risk-reward better and attractive as fundamental macro economic factors reflect strong recovery.

– The scheme can also be invested for STPs in equity funds.

– Hence investors will get an opportunity to get a better risk reward option in comparison to traditional investments over the short term.

Disclaimer:

Disclaimer:

Past performance may or may not be sustained in the future. Sector(s)/ Stock(s)/ Issuer(s) mentioned above are for the purpose of disclosure of the portfolio of the Scheme(s) and should not be construed as recommendation. The fund manager(s) may or may not choose to hold the stock mentioned, from time to time. Investors are requested to consult their financial, tax and other advisors before taking any investment decision(s).

GoodReturns.in



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI’s nod to SFBs and holding companies merger can unlock value for Ujjivan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Ujjivan Small Finance Bank said it would initiate steps for the amalgamation of the holding company Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd with the bank after RBI’s nod. Samit Ghosh, Founder, Ujjivan Financial Services, helps us understand how it may be good news for shareholders.

Now that, RBI has given nod to SFBs and respective holding companies to apply for a merger, help us understand how really does this help in unlocking share value for you?
This is extremely good news which we were expecting for quite some time and the first in the line of course is Equitas. Equitas and us, we worked earlier on this and we are very glad, it has come through. Basically, there is a holding company structure in which is the Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd. which owns the bank Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and we own 83% of the bank so, what the RBI has committed is that the holding companies can reverse merge into the bank and there will be one entity. Before that, there was the uncertainty of this and consequently, we are the holding company stock– UFSL stock was anywhere between 40% to 50% discount. Now, this discount will gradually narrow, so, there is a tremendous upside on the Ujjivan Financial services stock.The bank stock depends on how the bank actually performs in terms of business, but this is extremely good news for the Ujjivan Financial Services stock- the holding company stock, and that was the original shareholders. We have about 80,000 retail shareholders out of which there are at least 10,000-15,000 employee shareholders, who originally invested in the bank and this is extremely good news for them.

Our fifth year is in February 2022, and we can apply three months before that -for the reverse merger—with the RBI as per its new direction. RBI will evaluate the proposal and see whether we can go ahead, chances are that things are normal, we will be allowed to reverse merge. There is one issue which was there, by the fifth year the shareholding of the holding company was required to come down to 40% but we are quite confident that since RBI is allowing us to totally reverse, much of it- at the end of five years, going to be waved, so we do not think that is an issue at all. It is good news for the holding company shareholders.

When will this merger process be completed?
We will apply late October-early November and then RBI will give us the approval, I think the process cannot start before our fifth anniversary, which is early February 2022 and the whole legal and all that clauses NCLT etc. can take anywhere between eight to 12 months, so, that is the kind of time frame we are looking at.

Post the merger which entity will remain listed?
The bank will remain, the holding company will completely disappear so all the shareholders of the holding company will then become shareholders of the bank.

What has been the impact of the second wave on your business, are you now seeing faster recovery as compared to what we have witnessed last year and in light of that what would be the outlook on your growth disbursements for FY22?
I am not part of the bank, I think this question you should raise with Nitin Chugh, who is the managing director of the bank but what I can tell you overall in the industry-the second wave has receded to a certain extent, things are much better now, but this kind of crisis, which we are facing is an unprecedented crisis. We had faced an earlier crisis, demonetisation, which was like one shock kind of crisis and we overcame, but here, because of the multiple waves of the COVID crisis–it hits our customer and business in waves and the ultimate solution getting the population of India 70% or 80% vaccinated. Unfortunately today, the vaccine availability is still an issue, hopefully, in a couple of months from the production of the vaccine to the scheduling of the production in India, there will be abundant supply. There was a hesitancy even among our customer base before the second wave, but post the second wave that hesitancy has also gone. As as soon as the vaccines are available and we are able to vaccinate all our customer base or the entire population in India, then there is going to be a solution to this problem.

So, the most important thing to do is proactively help our customer base to get vaccinated, meanwhile RBI has given a lot of restructuring, opportunities for good customers and also to provide them additional cash, which is very important because people have either exhausted their savings or their working capital, and not only the restructuring but providing them the extra cash would help them but this has to be carefully done only for our good customers and that process is sort of a lengthy process. So, I think there is time till September, the bank is undertaking that and most micro finance institutions are undertaking that, it has to be done very carefully and I think that will help us to get out of the crisis.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Collection efficiency of bank loans improves in June, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Chennai: Banks witnessed an improvement in loan collection efficiency in June after states relaxed multiple lockdowns as the second Covid wave recedes.

For Equitas Small Finance Bank, collection efficiency for vehicle loans has come back to 89.3% in June, from 67.35% in May. While for microfinance loans, it is back at 66.9% from 63.6% and for small business loans it is back at 85.1% from 76.8%.

Its MD P N Vasudevan, “The Bank’s borrowers are largely in the informal segments dealing in daily use products and services which were temporarily disrupted due to the Covid-19 restrictions imposed. However, during June, states in the West and North experienced improved collection efficiencies as lockdowns eased while Southern states opened up towards the end of the month. We anticipate a sharp improvement in collections in the coming months as Covid wave recedes.”

For Indian Overseas Bank, the loan collection efficiency rate for small loans, vehicle and housing loans has improved to 85% between June and July from 70%-75% in May. The state-owned bank expects the recovery to be better in the September quarter, as it expects a large recovery of loans.

City Union Bank’s managing director N Kamakoti said that on an overall level, collection efficiency has recovered significantly in June as businesses have understood and adapted to lockdowns better.

A research note from Kotak on banks’ asset quality Kotak said that the recovery environment showed improvement in 1QFY22 though it is still not fully normal. There is likely to be more discussion on the recovery environment for 2QFY22 given the impact of the second Covid wave. Besides small loans, the report said it expects banks to provide a positive outlook on corporate recovery especially given a few large resolutions that have been completed/will be completed soon.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

3 SIPs From SBI Mutual Fund To Invest For The Long term

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


1. SBI Bluechip Fund

This is probably the largest mutual fund scheme from the SBI stable and has assets under management of Rs 28,000 crores plus. The fund was started way back in 2006 and has generated returns of almost 12 per cent on an annualized basis since its launch.

This fund invests in some of the larger companies, more often called largecap. Exposure of SBI Bluechip Fund is in stocks like HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Infosys, HCL Technologies, Larsen and Toubro and similar largecap stocks.

The net asset value under the growth plan is currently around the Rs 55 mark. The 1 year returns from the fund is nearly 50%.

Who should buy the SBI Bluechip Fund?

Who should buy the SBI Bluechip Fund?

Investors who are willing to take the risk, can invest in the SBI Bluechip Fund. Remember, this fund is a largecap fund and any fall in the markets, could lead to a fall in the value of investments. This is why it is so important to realize that the best way to go about when investing in largecap equity mutual funds is through the SIP route. So, if this month your SIP happened at a very high NAV because markets fell, next month you can average out the cost if the markets suddenly fall.

As far as SBI Bluechip Fund is concerned you can start off with a small SIP of Rs 500 per month.

2. SBI Focused Equity Fund

2. SBI Focused Equity Fund

The SBI Focused Equity Fund provides investors long-term capital appreciation by investing in a concentrated basket of equity and equity related securities. Unlike the SBI Bluechip Fund, this is a flexi cap fund. What this means is that the fund invests in companies that are large, mid size and also smaller in size. This is also not a very small fund and has sizeable assets under management of nearly Rs 17,000 crores.

It was launched much before the Bluechip Fund in 2004 and currently has a net asset value of more than Rs 213 under the growth option. The fund is suitable for those looking to invest for a tenure of about 5-years or so.

SIP for SBI Focussed Equity Fund

SIP for SBI Focussed Equity Fund

You can start an SIP in the fund through an investment of Rs 500 each month. The 1-year returns from the SBI Focused Equity Fund has been 50.23, which is not bad at all. We suggest investors to go only for SIP and not the lumpsum mode.

SBI Focussed Equity Fund has holdings in stocks like Muthoot Finance, State Bank of India, Alphabet Inc Class A, Divis Labs etc.

3. SBI Small Cap Fund

3. SBI Small Cap Fund

We wish to begin with a warning. The SBI Small cap Fund is only for those investors who are willing to take a risk. We say so, because small cap stocks are volatile and if the benchmark indices fall, they could fall faster, thus eroding capital significantly. On the other hand, if the markets rally they could give higher returns than the markets.

SBI Small Cap Fund has given solid returns of 84% in the last 1-year as markets have rallied. Therefore, it is good to invest through the SIP mode.

How to go for SIPs for SBI Small Cap Fund?

How to go for SIPs for SBI Small Cap Fund?

Invest in the fund through the SIP route, through a small sum of Rs 500 each month. A small sum of Rs 10,000 invested each month would have resulted in a sum of Rs 6.11 lakh. Investors who are willing to invest for 5 years or so, could reap good returns.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

Investing in equity mutual funds is risky, so investors need to be cautious. Neither Greynium Information technologies nor the author would be responsible for any losses incurred due to a decision based on the above articles Please consult a professional advisor and remember the markets have run-up sharply.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 582 583 584 585 586 16,278