Nifty Bank & financials trade in green; ICICI, Kotak Mahindra Bank top gainers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Nifty bank index traded at Rs 31,797 adding 0.24%, while BSE Bankex ended at 36,396 adding 0.34%. Shares that contributed the most were – RBL Bank at Rs 284 adding 5.40% followed by ICICI Bank at Rs 546 (1.80%), SBI at Rs 284 (1.12%), Kotak Mahindra Bank at Rs 1,970 (0.55%), federal Bank at Rs 72 (0.55%). While all the other major indices remained green, Axis Bank at Rs 654 (-1.48%) and HDFC Bank traded lower at Rs 1,420 (-0.43%).

Nifty Financial Services ended at 15,393 adding 0.09%. Indiabulls HSG was the top gainer at Rs 220 adding 0.32% followed by Power Finance at Rs 118 (0.13%). Shares that traded lower were- Bajaj Finance at Rs 5,030 (-1.73%), Cholamandalam at Rs 434 (-0.55%) and HDFC at Rs 2,638 (-0.49%).

Other key takeaways

India receives highest FII inflows in 2020
Indian equities received more than Rs 1.6 lakh crore ($23 billion) from foreign institutional investors in 2020, the highest among emerging markets. In fact, most Asian and emerging markets witnessed outflows in the year gone by. This was the second year in a row when FII inflows into Indian equities were highest among emerging markets. In 2019, the inflow was $14.2 billion.

Bitcoin breaks above $35,000 to touch new high
Bitcoin traded above $35,000 for the first time in Asia on Wednesday, rising to a high of $35,879 and extending a rally that has seen the digital currency rise more than 800% since mid-March.The world’s most popular cryptocurrency crossed $20,000 for the first time ever on December 16.

Rupee trades flat
Indian rupee erased the gains and trading flat at 73.18 per dollar, amid selling seen in the domestic equity market. It opened flat at 73.17 per dollar against Tuesday’s close of 73.17.

Gold Updates
On the Multi-Commodity Exchange (MCX), February gold contracts were trading lower by 0.31 percent at Rs 51,561 per 10 gram at 0920 hours. March silver was trading 0.72 percent lower at Rs 70,346 a kilogram.

Gold has support at 51440-51200 and resistance is placed at 52000-52200 levels. Silver has support at 70200-69500 while resistance is placed at 71500-72200 levels. Gold and silver extend gain on Tuesday amid weakness in the dollar index and 7-weeks lockdown in the UK. Both the precious metals were settled on a positive note.



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Things to keep in mind while exchanging your old gold jewellery

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When purchasing gold, we often exchange our seldom-used ornaments to reduce, at least to an extent, the total spend. If you have plans to exchange your old gold for new this festival season, here are some factors you should consider before you take the plunge.

No right time

If you think you will get a better deal if you exchange your old gold (in the form of jewellery or bar) when the gold prices are high, you are mistaken. This is because the gold you are exchanging and the new gold will buy are valued at the same price, which is the prevailing market price.

Whether the gold price is at ₹4,000 per gram or ₹5,000 per gram, you can always exchange your old gold ornament for the same quantity of new gold ornament at no additional cost (except making charges and taxes).

Having said that, we usually tend to buy more gold (in weight) than what we exchange. Thus, you will be better off buying gold (with or without exchange) when gold prices are lower.

Purity check

While exchanging gold, the timing of exchange doesn’t matter much. What matter is the weight and purity of the gold you are trading off.

Jewellers use a jewellery weighing machine and an assaying machine to determine the weight and purity of the gold you offer, after removing any stones and other embellishments.

If you would want to cross-verify if these metrics are assessed correctly by the jeweller, you can do so, if you have the invoice of the gold you are exchanging .

Of course, if your old gold is hallmarked, the details of the purity of the gold would be mentioned on the item itself. Hallmarking of gold is done only for three levels of purity — 22 karat gold (22K916), 18 karat gold (18K750) and for 14 karat gold (14K585).

A pure gold bar would be of generally 24 karat purity.

N Anantha Padmanaban, Managing Director of Chenna-based NAC Jewellers, says there is no need for customers to test the purity if the gold is hallmarked and brought from a reputed gold showroom.

Say, the gold you want to exchange is not hallmarked, you can request the jeweller to display the purity test results.

GR ‘Anand’ Ananthapadmanabhan, Managing Director of GRT Jewellers, another Chennai-based player, says the gold given for exchange with his firm will be melted and tested using an XRF machine right in front of the customers, if they request for it.

Following the acceptance of terms of the weight and purity of the gold exchanged, take a moment to notice the gold rate used to value your old gold.

If the gold being exchanged is of 18 karat, but the gold being bought is of 22 karat, the applicable gold rate to value the old gold should be the gold rate for 22 karat x (18/22).

For example, if the rate charged for the 22 karat gold you are buying is ₹5,000 per gram and you are exchanging 18 karat gold, your old gold should be valued at a minimum of ₹4,090 (5,000 x 18/22).

But if you are exchanging gold of 22 karat purity, it should be valued at the same ₹5,000 per gram.

Wastage on total value

Note that while the value of exchanged gold will be deducted from the cost of your new ornament, the making and waste charges (otherwise called ‘value addition (VA)’) and taxes (SGST and CGST — each of 1.5 per cent) shall be calculated as a percentage on the original vale of the new ornament and not on the deducted value.

For instance, say the value of the gold in the old ornament exchanged and the new ornament is ₹1 lakh and ₹2 lakh respectively. Your total cash outflow would be ₹1 lakh (₹ 2 lakh – ₹ 1 lakh) plus VA of ₹20,000 (say, VA is 10 per cent-then 2 lakh x 10 per cent) plus taxes of ₹6,600 (GST of 3 per cent on new ornament value plus VA). That would be equal to ₹1,26,600.

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Why investing via wallets in gold is fraught with risks

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Are you in a rush to buy gold, given the breathtaking rally of the metal? It is understandable that as an investor hunting for returns, you don’t want to miss the bus. In this article, we make compare different modes of digital investment in gold based on safety and returns.

There are broadly three ways to invest in gold digitally — buying through mobile wallet companies such as Paytm, PhonePe or GooglePay or through digital platforms of players such as Motilal Oswal and HDFC securities; buying through mutual funds via listed gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs); and buying sovereign gold bonds (SGBs) of the RBI.

Gold ETFs

Gold ETFs are safe and transparent instruments. There are many checks and balances in place to ensure that the investor is not cheated.

For every unit of the instrument you buy, there is physical gold bought by the AMC (asset management company) and this is checked by a SEBI-registered custodian (for most gold ETFs, it is Deutsche Bank).

The presence of a custodian in gold ETFs of mutual funds, besides a trustee, adds a layer of safety for investors.

The custodian is responsible for safekeeping of gold, and is obliged to keep a check on gold holdings’ net inflows and outflows.

 

Further, in the case of gold ETFs, all gold is stored with an independent vaulting agency — mostly, Brink’s India — where records are maintained on a daily basis for bar number, purity certificate, gold movement, etc.

Also, unlike issuers of digital gold, the MFs issuing gold ETFs are required to give periodic disclosures on fund holdings through a fact sheet at the end of every month to SEBI. Also, there is auditing of the gold-holding of the MF by internal as we all as SEBI auditors.

Charges: For an investor, gold ETFs may work out cheaper than digital gold of mobile wallets. Investors can buy and sell gold ETFs without GST. However, note that there is a fund management cost and brokerage.

Sovereign gold bonds

SGBs score the highest on safety among the digital gold investments.

It is issued by the Reserve Bank of India (in denominations of one gram of gold and in multiples thereof) and comes with sovereign guarantee. It is available in demat form.

Further, there is an added benefit of 2.5 per cent per annum interest, that boosts returns for the investor.

Also, if you hold it till maturity, that is, eight years, there is no tax on the capital gains from gold price increase. The bonds is issued and redeemed at the market price of gold.

Charges: There is no extra cost on SGBs but for what you pay the broker (or other intermediaries) to buy the bond.

There is discount available for investors buying online at the time of the primary issue by the RBI.

Digital platforms

MMTC-PAMP — a joint venture between MMTC, a Government of India company that is into gold trading, and PAMP, a Switzerland-based gold refiner — sells gold as coins/bars in different denominations through retail outlets and also digitally. You can buy the gold of MMTC-PAMP through players including Paytm, PhonePe, Google Pay, or through stock brokers such as HDFC securities or Motilal Oswal, digitally. While the purity of gold of MMTC-PAMP is assured (it is LBMA ( London Bullion Market Association)-certified for 999.9 purity), the lack of regulation in the space poses a risk.

There is no watchdog governing this space, like the Securities Exchange Board of India that governs gold ETFs or the Reserve Bank of India that oversees sovereign gold bonds.

In September 2019, there was news of the Central government considering closing of some operations of MMTC.

MMTC-PAMP tried to calm the nerves of its investors by saying that MMTC was only a minority shareholder in the entity and that the joint venture will continue unaffected by the government’s decision.

It added that IDBI Security is its trustee and that customers’ gold is safe with it.

But this may have to be taken with a pinch of salt as there is no regulator and there is no independent auditing of the holdings.

For people wanting to buy physical gold digitally, another option is using SafeGold, which is offered through mobile wallets, including PhonePe. Again, this is an unregulated entity and risks are the same as investing through MMTC-PAMP.

Besides, the gold you buy here is a tad lower in purity — 995 fineness against 999.9 offi MMTC-PAMP gold.

The point in which SafeGold scores is that it stores gold in Brink’s India vaults unlike MMTC-PAMP, which keeps customers’ precious metal in its own vaults.

Note that while the digital platforms allow you to sell the gold in your account without having to redeem it physically, you cannot sell gold on the same day you buy it.

Also, there is a 2-3 per cent difference between the buy and sell prices because of the charges levied by the distributor/gold-issuer. Further, with MMTC-PAMP, you can keep gold only for five years, and with SafeGold, it is two years from the date of purchase.

Charges: The cost of buying gold through the digital platforms is higher. For instance, on August 12, the rate on Paytm for buying 1 gram of 24k gold was ₹5,423.32, while gold ETFs were quoting at ₹5,193/gram (the LBMA spot price). Besides, note that each time you buy/sell gold via digital platforms, you will be charged 3 per cent GST.

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