Tips To Increase Your Mutual Fund/SIP Returns

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oi-Roshni Agarwal

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Mutual funds as per survey have been the major investment that attracted investors’ attention amid the pandemic. Notably, their benefits are many as it enables the investor to not actively manage the stocks, can compound wealth over the years as well as via the SIP and STP route help in swift transfer of funds between equity and debt funds.

Tips To Increase Your Mutual Fund/SIP Returns

Tips To Increase Your Mutual Fund/SIP Returns

So, as mutual funds can offer good enough return with curtailed levels of risk, here are some of the key points to note for making the most of mutual funds or SIP.

1. Do not stop a SIP in bearish market mood:

This is not advised as if you go by it then in such a situation you actually won’t be able to realize the benefit of rupee cost averaging that comes with such SIP plans that helps you get more units in lower markets and hence reduce your investment cost and increase your returns.

Also, the period of bearish market can be capitalized on by parking investible surplus such as by topping the current SIPs. This topping of the SIP in a weak market can also help you in realizing your end financial goal may be sooner than the previously considered timeline.

2. For better returns and fund selection always go with long term performance:

The recent fund performance cannot be the appropriate factor to decide on your mutual fund/SIP investment. As the various market factors such as in the current situation high liquidity, economic support policies of the government are at present supporting the current bull run. Usually for an apt selection, the fund’s should be compared with their peer funds in respect of their 5 and 10-year fund performance. This will even provide a clear picture on how the funds have performed over the complete economic cycle.

3. NAV of the fund is not the factor to decide on the fund’s cheap price:

NAV or net asset value of a fund should not be looked upon as a criteria for deciding whether the fund is cheap or not. NAV is determined by a host of sectors such as fund’s market constituents and if a scheme is well administered then it may also grow higher rapidly. Likewise fund schemes that are into existence for long will have a higher NAV. Fund hence should be chosen considering the fund’s past performance as well as the future prospects of outperforming funds as well as benchmark indexes.

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El Salvador explores bitcoin mining powered by volcanoes, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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At a geothermal power plant near El Salvador‘s Tecapa volcano, 300 computers whir inside a trailer as they make complex mathematical calculations day and night verifying transactions for the cryptocurrency bitcoin.

The pilot project has inspired a rash of volcano emojis from President Nayib Bukele, who made bitcoin legal tender in September, and promises of cheap, renewable energy for so-called bitcoin “mining.” Such operations, including ones industrial in scale, have been harshly criticized elsewhere in the world for the massive amounts of electricity they use and the resulting carbon footprint.

Bukele and others say El Salvador’s geothermal resources – generating electricity from high-pressure steam produced by the volcano’s subterranean heat – could be a solution. But the picture in the tiny Central American country is more complicated.

“We don’t spend resources that contaminate the environment, we don’t depend on oil, we don’t depend on natural gas, on any resource that isn’t renewable,” Daniel Alvarez, president of the Rio Lempa Hydroelectric Executive Commission, which oversees the plant, said during a tour Friday.

Cheap power and a supportive government are the two critical factors for attracting bitcoin mining operations, said Brandon Arvanaghi, a bitcoin mining consultant.

Two years ago, China provided about three-quarters of all the electricity used for crypto mining, with operations flocking to take advantage of its cheap hydroelectric power. But the government began restricting mining and in September declared all transactions involving bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies illegal.

That has led to a scramble to set up mining operations in other countries.

It would appear to be fortuitous for Bukele, who shocked the nation and many around the world with his announcement last summer that bitcoin would become legal tender beside the U.S. dollar in El Salvador. The president sold the plan in part as a way for Salvadorans living overseas – mostly in the U.S.- to send money home to their families more cheaply. It also made him a darling of the bitcoin world.

But the launch has been rocky. The digital wallet Salvadorans were expected to use to perform basic transactions had a glitchy rollout. Some users said they just wanted the $30 the government offered as an incentive. There continue to be concerns that the digital currency, which touts being controlled by no government, will invite criminal activity.

So far, the United States has been a big winner in attracting more bitcoin mining operations, especially the state of Texas, which has bountiful renewable energy and a de-regulated market.

Bitcoin mining in El Salvador would appear to have a supportive government in Bukele, but cheap electricity is so far just a promise.

El Salvador imports about one-fifth to one-quarter of its electricity. The rest of production is divided among hydroelectric, geothermal and plants fired by fossil fuels.

Geothermal accounts for about a quarter of the country’s energy. El Salvador has 23 volcanoes.

“When you add these renewable sources like these vast abundant areas, a ton of renewable sources and a friendly regime it can be very attractive and El Salvador may very well fit that model,” Arvanaghi said.

Right now, El Salvador’s electricity is not considered particularly cheap.

The website GlobalPetrolPrices.com, which publishes retail energy prices around the world, puts electric costs to households and businesses in El Salvador well above the global average.

Arvanaghi said that bitcoin mining incentivizes the expansion of renewable energy production by providing high demand for cheap power and that miners have shown themselves to be willing to pause a portion of their machines at times when there is less power available from the grid.

Bukele’s promise of cheap power for bitcoin mining then would have to involve a subsidy, at least until renewable capacity expanded and rates declined.

Luis Gonzalez, public policy director at the nongovernmental organization Salvadoran Ecological Unit (UNES), said if El Salvador can manage to provide cheaper, renewable power it should go to the country’s families, not cryptocurrency mining operations.

“The ideal would be that the cheapest, cleanest, most national energy would be for the people,” Gonzalez said.

He also warned that advertising geothermal as clean has caveats. It is cleaner than burning fossil fuels, he said, but comes with its own impacts. The sites where wells are dug to tap into the subterranean heat impact the local habitat. He also expressed concerns that aquifers could become contaminated at geothermal sites.

“We’re the country with the least access to water in Central America,” he said, noting that was the main reason El Salvador banned metals mining four years ago.

Many bitcoin mining operations have concentrated in cooler climates too, because beyond the electricity to power the machines more is the need to keep them cool, Gonzalez said. El Salvador has a tropical climate.

At the Berlin Geothermal plant, two hours drive east of the capital, Gustavo Cuellar, special projects adviser for the Rio Lempa Hydroelectric Executive Commission, is overseeing the mining operation. He said the specialized mining machines on the site are using 1.5 megawatts of the 102 megawatts the plant produces. El Salvador’s other geothermal plant in Ahuachapan produces another 95 megawatts.

Together the plants provide power to 1.5 million of El Salvador’s 6.5 million citizens.

Alvarez said that the project will grow over time “because we have the renewable energy resource, we have a lot of potential to continue producing energy to mine.”

__

Sherman reported from Mexico City.



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Bitcoin tops $60,000 again on ETF hopes, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bitcoin hit $60,000 for the first time in six months on Friday, nearing its alltime high, as hopes grew that US regulators would allow a futures-based exchange-traded fund (ETF), a move likely to open the path to wider investment in digital assets.

Cryptocurrency investors have been waiting for approval of the first US ETF for bitcoin, with bets on such a move fuelling its recent rally. The world’s biggest cryptocurrency rose 4.5% to its highest level since April 17, and was last at $59,290. It has risen by more than half since September 20 and closing in on its record high of $64,895 hit in April.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is set to allow the first US bitcoin futures ETF to be traded next week, Bloomberg reported on Thursday. Such a move would open a new path for investors to gain exposure to the emerging asset, traders and analysts said.

“ETFs open up a raft of avenues for people to gain exposure, and there will be a swift move to these structures,” said Charles Hayter, CEO of data firm CryptoCompare, which tracks ETF products.

“It reduces the frictions for investors to gain exposure and gives traditional funds room to use the asset for diversification purposes.” Bitcoin’s moves on Friday were spurred by a tweet from the SEC’s investor education office urging investors to weigh risks and benefits of investing in funds that holds bitcoin futures contracts, said Ben Caselin of Asiabased crypto exchange AAX.

Several fund managers, including the VanEck Bitcoin Trust, ProShares, Invesco, Valkyrie and Galaxy Digital Funds have applied to launch bitcoin ETFs in the US. Crypto ETFs have launched this year in Canada and Europe, growing in popularity amid surging interest in digital assets. The SEC did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the report.



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India’s Forex reserves rise by $2.04 billion to $639.51 billion, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The country’s foreign exchange reserves rose by $2.039 billion to $639.516 billion in the week ended October 8, according to RBI data. In the previous week ended October 1, the reserves had dipped by $1.169 billion to $637.477 billion. The reserves had surged by $8.895 billion to a lifetime high of $642.453 billion in the week ended September 3.

During the reporting week ended October 8, the rise in the reserves was on account of an increase in the Foreign Currency Assets (FCAs), Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) weekly data released on Friday showed.

FCA rose by $1.55 billion to $577.001 billion in the reporting week, as per the data.

Expressed in dollar terms, FCA include the effect of appreciation or depreciation of non-US units like the euro, pound and yen held in the foreign exchange reserves.

Gold reserves were up by $464 million to $38.022 billion in the reporting week.

The Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rose by $28 million to $19.268 billion.

The country’s reserve position with the IMF declined by $3 million to $5.225 billion in the reporting week, the data showed.



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European equities climb at open on better-than-expected US recovery, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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European stock markets opened higher on Friday, with investors encouraged by a strong start to the US earnings season.

In initial trade, London’s benchmark FTSE 100 index won 0.4 percent to 7,234.69 points, compared with Thursday’s close.

In the eurozone, the Paris CAC 40 added 0.5 percent to 6,720.72 points and Frankfurt’s DAX rose 0.1 percent to 15,484.79.

“The US earnings seasons unfolding … has set a very positive tone so far,” said AvaTrade analyst Naeem Aslam.

“We have seen really healthy numbers out of the US banking sector this week. The remaining Wall Street giants will report their earnings today.”

Asian equities extended gains Friday as traders also cheered better-than-expected data indicating the US recovery remains on track — despite concerns over elevated inflation and the imminent end to cheap cash.



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Asian markets rally as earnings offset inflation, taper worries, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Hong Kong: Asian markets extended a global rally Friday on optimism for corporate earnings after a strong start to the reporting season, while traders cheered better-than-expected data indicating the US recovery remains on track despite inflation concerns and the imminent end to cheap cash.

Central banks around the world are preparing to start — or in some cases have started — winding back the vast financial support put in place at the beginning of the pandemic, which has helped economies rebound and pushed equities to record or multi-year highs.

Soaring prices, supply chain snarls and a brewing energy crisis caused by the reopening from lockdowns have put increasing pressure on finance chiefs to act sooner than they had expected to prevent inflation from getting out of control.

And that has put a brake on a market rally that had lasted for a year and a half.

However, traders have refound some of their mojo this week as strong earnings from banking giants including JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Citigroup fuel hopes for a standout round of reports.

Meanwhile, US figures showing new applications for unemployment benefits fell below 300,000 last week, for the first time since the pandemic started, provided fresh evidence for the recovery narrative.

The S&P 500 on Wall Street had its best day since March, while the Dow and Nasdaq also saw big gains.

Asia followed suit, with Tokyo up 1.8 percent and Taipei more than two percent higher. Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Bangkok and Manila also rose.

Hong Kong jumped more than one percent, having reopened after two days off, though Jakarta and Wellington dipped.

London, Paris and Frankfurt all opened on a positive note.

Investors are now awaiting the Federal Reserve’s next move as it plots an exit from its vast bond-buying monetary easing programme, with next month or December seen as the beginning, while bets on an early-2022 interest rate hike are also building.

“We’re likely going to continue to see this elevated inflation and probably well into 2022,” Wealth Enhancement Group’s Nicole Webb said on Bloomberg Television, adding that she saw November as the likely beginning of tapering.

Her comments were echoed elsewhere, with analysts warning that inflation is not going to be a short-term issue, as many observers — as well as Fed officials — had suggested.

And markets analyst Louis Navellier added that broadly healthy jobs readings showed the Fed’s goal of taming unemployment had been achieved.

“I think it is safe to conclude that the Fed has completed its unemployment mandate and can now turn its attention to another mandate, namely fighting inflation,” he said in a note.

Expectations for tighter US policy pushed the dollar above 114 yen for the first time since late 2018.

Oil markets continued their march higher, with both main contracts enjoying strong buying on expectations for a pick-up in demand as economies reopen and producers maintain a cap on output.

And bitcoin jumped to within touching distance of $60,000 for the first time since May after a report said the US Securities and Exchange Commission was close to greenlighting the first futures exchange-traded fund for the unit.

The cryptocurrency has been on a rollercoaster ride since hitting a record near $65,000 in April before tanking on concerns about a clampdown in China and mixed messages from major investor and Tesla tycoon Elon Musk.

Key figures around 0720 GMT – Tokyo – Nikkei 225: UP 1.8 percent at 29,068.63 (close)

Hong Kong – Hang Seng Index: UP 1.2 percent at 25,254.61

Shanghai – Composite: UP 0.4 percent at 3,572.37 (close)

London – FTSE 100: UP 0.5 percent at 7,240.32

Dollar/yen: UP at 114.03 yen from 113.67 yen at 2040 GMT

Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3690 from $1.3674

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1612 from $1.1601

Euro/pound: UP at 84.82 pence from 84.80 pence

West Texas Intermediate: UP 0.8 percent at $81.98 per barrel

Brent North Sea crude: UP 0.9 percent at $84.75 per barrel

New York – Dow: UP 1.6 percent at 34,912.56 (close)

dan/leg

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5 Top Auto Ancillary Multibaggers Of The Last 1-year

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oi-Roshni Agarwal

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Major auto players have suggested and confirmed that the chip crisis is a near term issue and will be resolved soon, amid it and the festive season in the counting, the sector that was knocked down owing to coronavirus led lockdown and hence subsequent weak sales, is highly likely to make a good comeback. Nonetheless, few of the players in the run up have managed to give multibagger returns i.e. of over 100 percent in a 1-year’s time frame.

5 Top Auto Ancillary Multibaggers Of The Last 1-year

5 Top Auto Ancillary Multibaggers Of The Last 1-year

Also, in comparison to the auto stocks’ there is more bullishness on the auto ancillary stocks.

1. GNA Axles:

GNA Axles Limited is among the leading manufacturers of rear axle shafts used in on-highway and off-highway vehicular segments in India. The company ever since its first production has been expanding its portfolio and is now actively engaged in exports.

In the last one year, the share price of GNA Axles has gained 345 percent to currently quoting at over Rs. 1077 apiece on the NSE. Furthermore, dividend history of the stock is good.

The stock has been on the buy list of Angel Broking for substantial gains.

2. Rajratan Global:

The publicly held company is into manufacture of steel wires. The group draws its revenues from selling tyre bead wire as well as other ancillary products. Also its operation scale even beyond India.

The stock of the company has surged over 600 percent to a price of over Rs. 2200 currently from levels of Rs.330, a year ago.

3. Pricol:

Based out of Coimbatore, the company is an automotive components as well as precision products manufacturing entity.

This is a small cap scrip from the auto ancillary space that in a year’s time has also multi-fold return of over 100 percent.

The company as per reports aims to become debt free in a 1-year period despite low demand. In FY21, the company’s debt stood at Rs. 247 crore and this has substantially reduced its debt from Rs. 431 crore in Fy 2020. Now ever since the company’s new MD has taken over, the company has been on a recovery path.

4. Kinetic Engineering:

It is a Firodia group entity that launched the famous Luna Moped. The company’s founder started the industry’s most respectable companies in the space including Kinetic Engineering Limited and Kinetic Honda Motor Company (in collaboration with Honda).The company’s product portfolio in transmission components like gears, shafts, axles, and more; engine components, including crankshafts, cylinder heads, camshafts, with complete gearbox and engine assemblies for auto and non-auto products.

This is a small cap company with an market cap of Rs. 112.6 crore. The stock in a year’s time has surged by 256 percent to now scale to Rs. 63.6 per share.

5. Kranti Industries:

The company has capabilities into machining critical components with utmost precision. An OEM-supplier of All type of Critical Machined Components to Indian and Global automobile giants
The company’s stock in the last 1-year has surged by 200%.

Story first published: Friday, October 15, 2021, 13:28 [IST]



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Sebi issues revised reporting formats for issuers of non-convertible securities, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Sebi issues revised reporting formats for issuers of non-convertible securities Markets regulator Sebi on Thursday came out with revised formats for limited review and audit reports to be submitted by entities that have listed their non-convertible securities. The revised formats are for limited review and audit reports for banks and NBFCs as well as other entities, excluding insurance companies.

Insurance companies would disclose limited review/ audit reports as per the formalities specified by Irdai, Sebi said in a circular.

The formats would be applicable for limited review reports for quarterly standalone financial results for banks and NBFCs as well as entities other than banks and NBFCs. Besides, it would have to be followed for audit reports for quarterly standalone as well as annual consolidated financial results to be submitted by all these entities.

Sebi said the circular will come into force with immediate effect.

The circular will also supersede circulars issued in November 2015 and August 2016 with respect to listed entities for disclosure of financial results that have listed non-convertible debt securities and non-convertible redeemable preference shares.

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Sebi issues revised reporting formats for issuers of non-convertible securities, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Markets regulator Sebi on Thursday came out with revised formats for limited review and audit reports to be submitted by entities that have listed their non-convertible securities. The revised formats are for limited review and audit reports for banks and NBFCs as well as other entities, excluding insurance companies.

Insurance companies would disclose limited review/ audit reports as per the formalities specified by Irdai, Sebi said in a circular.

The formats would be applicable for limited review reports for quarterly standalone financial results for banks and NBFCs as well as entities other than banks and NBFCs. Besides, it would have to be followed for audit reports for quarterly standalone as well as annual consolidated financial results to be submitted by all these entities.

Sebi said the circular will come into force with immediate effect.

The circular will also supersede circulars issued in November 2015 and August 2016 with respect to listed entities for disclosure of financial results that have listed non-convertible debt securities and non-convertible redeemable preference shares.

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Hard choices loom for finance chiefs and their climate pledges, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Washington, Oct 15, 2021 -In speeches and communiques from top finance officials at the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank this week, one word was ubiquitous: climate.

Leaders of the institutions and government ministers pledged action to meet the global climate goals of keeping warning below 1.5 degrees Celsius and reaching net zero emissions by 2050, with an eye towards next month’s COP26 climate change summit.

“I’m afraid it is time to roll up our sleeves and detail our plan of actions,” Britain’s Prince Charles said at a World Bank event Thursday.

“With action on climate change, biodiversity loss and a just transition more urgent than ever, I can only encourage us all to get to work and solve this problem.”

But behind the rhetoric lies the harsh reality of the extent of the work left to do to meet the goals, and the rancor around the issue.

Washington leaned on multilateral lenders worldwide to step up financing of climate friendly projects, even as activists launched a salvo at the World Bank president.

Meanwhile, the world’s largest asset manager warned that expensive investments are necessary to prevent catastrophe.

“Rich countries must put more taxpayer money to work in driving the net-zero transition abroad,” BlackRock chief Larry Fink wrote in The New York Times on Wednesday.

Reaching the net-zero emissions goal will require $1 trillion a year in investments aimed at poor countries, which Fink estimates would need $100 billion in yearly subsidies to be viable.

“While the figure seems daunting, especially as the world is recovering from the Covid pandemic, a failure to invest now will lead to greater costs later,” he said.

– ‘Personnel is policy’ – The meetings held semi-virtually in Washington came amid growing alarm over what unchecked climate change will do to the planet.

The World Bank last month in a disturbing report warned that reduced agricultural output, water scarcity, rising sea levels and other adverse effects of climate change could cause up to 216 million people to leave their homes and migrate within their own countries by 2050.

An IMF study estimated that direct and indirect subsidies of fossil fuels added up to $5.9 trillion or about 6.8 percent of global GDP in 2020, and helped undercut climate goals by keeping gas cheap.

While officials at the two Washington-based multilateral lenders insisted they are razor focused on climate change, not all were convinced.

On Thursday, 77 advocacy groups asked for World Bank President David Malpass to step aside.

Malpass has emphasized the World’s Bank’s climate investment and said it provides half of all multilateral lending towards such projects — a huge change from years past when the development lender financed controversial projects, criticized for their environmental impact.

But the groups said that since the 2015 Paris climate accord, the institution has steered $12 billion towards fossil fuel.

“Personnel is policy: The World Bank needs leadership that will support countries with real green and inclusive development pathways,” said Luisa Galvao of Friends of the Earth US, which signed the petition.

– Leaning on international banks – The actions of the United States during the meetings were closely watched, since Washington hold the most voting power at the organizations, but the world’s largest economy also is a major carbon emitter.

President Joe Biden however has promised a government-wide offensive to tackle climate change.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen this week convened leaders of several multilateral lenders — including the World Bank and developments banks in Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa — and pressed them to dedicate more capital towards projects intended to mitigate climate change.

She also announced that her department would study how climate change is affecting communities and households in the United States, which this year alone has seen deadly winter storms strike Texas and the Midwest, wildfires roast California and successive hurricanes pummel the East Coast.

But while the White House now has a greater emphasis on addressing what Yellen called an “existential threat,” agreement among the greater US political class on what to do about it remains elusive.

Biden has proposed two spending bills in Congress that could direct historic sums of money towards improving the country’s climate resiliency and cutting emissions, but they are mired in the rancorous and divided US Congress.

cs/hs



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