Where to park your equity profits

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Of late, a chorus of market voices have piped up to say that global stock prices are in bubble territory. The RBI recently described the Indian stock market as a bubble. Bubble or no bubble, there can be no disputing that after the breathless rally of the last five years, Indian stock valuations are very expensive. If you’re sitting on hefty equity gains or high equity allocations, this makes it prudent to book some profits on your equity portfolio. But a practical problem that stops many folks from booking equity profits is not knowing where to invest those gains.

We suggest dividing your gains into three buckets and recommend suitable investment products for each bucket.

Capital protection bucket

If the stock market rally has made a significant difference to your overall wealth, you may want to convert some of those paper gains into real money, to meet your short-term or long-term financial goals. In this case, you should primarily look for safety of your capital in re-investing your equity gains.

Market-based bond investments today carry both credit and duration risk (the risk of default because of Covid and the risk of capital loss from rising rates). Indian government-backed sovereign instruments offer protection from both.

If you are looking to set aside equity gains towards long-term goals such as retirement that are at least seven years away, GOI’s Floating Rate Savings Bonds sold by RBI on tap via leading banks, offer the rare combination of good returns with capital safety. The bonds’ floating interest is pegged at a 35-basis point premium to the prevailing rate on the National Savings Certificates. For the April-June quarter, this interest was 7.15 per cent.

The floating rate makes this a good bet in a rising inflation/rate scenario. The only disadvantage of the bonds is that it offers no compounding and only pays out interest. The bonds also carry a 7- year lock-in and are not tradeable. A second sovereign-backed option is the five-year National Savings Certificate (NSC) from India Post. While rates are reset quarterly, you get to lock into a specific rate for five years. NSC currently offers lower rates of 6.8 per cent than the GOI savings bonds. But it allows accumulation of interest and has a shorter lock-in of 5 years.

For goals that are 5-7 years away, passive debt ETFs that invest in government securities are good options. IDFC Gilt 2027 Index Fund, IDFC Index 2028 Index Fund and Nippon ETF 5-year Gilt ETF are such funds that can get you to a fairly predictable return by those target dates.

If you need the money within the next 3-5 years, you can consider gilt mutual funds with a short maturity (there aren’t too many of them but Axis Gilt is one) or PSU & Banking funds with short maturity (Axis, UTI and IDFC have less than 2-year average maturity). These may not be as safe as sovereign instruments, but do offer liquidity with a fair degree of capital protection.

Diversification bucket

Some folks may book profits in their equity holdings not because they need the money to meet any goals, but simply to de-risk their portfolios. If you work to a pre-decided asset allocation pattern (as all investors should) and have seen your equity allocations overshoot your comfort level, you should invest your equity gains in long-term options that help you diversify from equity risks.

Two options to consider are Sovereign Gold Bonds and REITs. Gold is one asset class that has lagged during the concerted rally in stocks, bonds and commodities recently. It also tends to deliver gains when stock prices tank. Sovereign gold bonds, bought either from primary issuances by RBI or in the secondary market, therefore present a good option to park some of your equity gains. Gold ETFs can be an alternative.

Real estate too has delivered rather muted performance in India in the last few years and therefore makes for a good diversifier. REITs or Real Estate Investment Trusts are a good proxy for commercial real estate investments, through a regulated, divisible and liquid vehicle. Listed REITs such as Embassy Office Parks and Mindspace own a portfolio of office complexes from which they earn rents from high-quality clients.

Liquidity bucket

You may have every intention of getting back into equity markets when a big correction materialises and valuations cool down. Such corrections and also the reversals from them, can be swift and sharp. Re-deploying your money into equities after such corrections would be impossible if you lock all your equity gains into instruments such as GoI bonds, NSC or even SGBs.

To keep powder dry for such a re-entry, apart from Gilt and PSU/Banking debt funds mentioned above, Liquid Bees or other Liquid ETFs (ETF which invest only in safe money market instruments) are a good option. These funds carry a constant NAV while declaring their returns as daily dividends, which are credited as fresh units in your demat account.

Fixed deposits with leading banks, which can be instantly liquidated online, are just as good for this purpose. These aren’t high-return or tax-efficient options but keep your money safe for quick re-deployment.

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India Post Payments Bank app: The good, the bad and the ugly

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Post office savings schemes such as recurring deposit (RD), public provident fund (PPF) and Sukanya Smariddhi Scheme (SSY) require annual minimum/periodical contribution towards the account. An app from India Post Payments Bank (IPPB) enables investors to do online processing of such transactions instantly. Here’s a snapshot of features, pros and cons of this mobile app, which is available both on the android and iOS platforms.

Features

The on-boarding process is fairly simple if you have a KYC (know your customer)-compliant savings account with IPPB already. If you do not have such account, you can open an account too on the app using PAN, Aadhaar and registered mobile number. Note that savings account with IPPB is not the same as post office savings bank (POSB) account.

Once the IPPB account is created,the app can be used to transfer sums to your post office schemes, namely RD, PPF and SSY. The app only enables transfer and not creation of account under these schemes.

Money to this IPPB account can be transferred just like you transfer money to any other bank account. The online methods include transferring through net-banking or digital UPI payment apps such as PhonePe. One can also send money to the IPPB account from your POSB account.

Transfer to the respective post office schemes can be made by selecting the investment product displayed under the ‘post office services’ in the app. The app asks for the account number of the scheme you are investing into and your customer id with the post office.

IPPB send a notification after every successful payment transfer.

Generally, post office customers are allowed to take a loan against some of the schemes such as RD and PPF investments subject to certain conditions. The IPPB app enables users to make repayments in the case of loans taken against your recurring deposit.

Pros and cons

It is common practice that we open an account in a particular post office and then move places or towns. With PPF and SSY being long-term products, this app helps overcome the disability of having to be present in the same location or depend on agents to make the contribution.

However, IPPB app is not the only route. Payments to RD/PPF opened at post office (barring SSY) can also be made using net-banking facility provided by India Post on your POSB account. If you have opened investments in these small savings schemes with banks instead of the post office, you won’t have any problem as you can do the transfer at the click of the mouse sitting wherever you want.

One aspect in which the app stands out is user interface. On selecting a particular investment product, it displays the minimum and maximum annual limits and deposits already made by you in the current year clearly. This, along with transaction history, helps users keep a track of their investments, and avoid breaching the prescribed limits..

Further, you need not worry about maintaining any balance in the IPPB savings account since there is no minimum balance requirement.

Not allowing fund transfers to other schemes such as NSC and SCSS is a drawback of the app. Also, as mentioned, one cannot open/close the SSA, PPF or RD accounts using the app. No option to check the cumulative balance in these post office schemes is also a disappointment.

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Which are the best small savings schemes

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The government’s double-take on interest rates on small savings schemes raised eyebrows last week. After the initial cuts, the interest rates on these schemes for the April -June 2021 quarter were restored to FY20 levels (all quarters). What are the attractive pockets in these schemes for investors below 60 years of age?

NSC a decent bet

Interest rates are at a bottom now and are likely to go up in the next year or so. But, one cannot predict the exact timeline. If the circular on the new small savings rates issued on March 31 (withdrawn later) is any indication, the NSC interest rate may go down further, before moving up. Hence, for conservative investors to whom the sovereign guarantee offered by the post office schemes gives peace of mind, the NSC is a good bet.

At 6.8 per cent, it offers a better return than similar tenure bank deposits that offer 5-6.5 per cent.

Importantly, if you are under the old tax regime, the tax benefits on initial investment of up to ₹1.5 lakh and on the interest when reinvested under 80C, will imply an even higher yield, which makes NSC more attractive.

Floating rate on PPF, SSY

The PPF is offering 7.1 per cent and the advantage is that one does not lock into a rate. The interest rate fixed for each quarter applies to the entire balance in your PPF account and not just the investment made in that quarter.

Thus, if the interest rates moves up, the interest accrued on PPF also goes up and vice-versa. The PPF also enjoys EEE taxation – 80C exemption on initial investment, and no tax on the interest accrued and the maturity proceeds.

There are hardly any comparable fixed income products with a 15-year tenure and thus it, stands out.

If you are a parent or guardian of a girl child below 10 years, the Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana should be your first port of call in fixed income. The interest rate offered (7.6 per cent per annum) is the highest amongst all small savings schemes.

The tenure can be a maximum of 15 years from date of opening or till the child turns 21. It matures when your child turns 21.

Similar to PPF, you don’t lock into the interest rate and you also enjoy EEE taxation. Under the new regime, there are no tax breaks (80C deduction) on contributions made to PPF/SSY.

However, the interest accrued and the maturity amount are tax-exempt.

 

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Centre pulls back interest rate cuts on small savings schemes, calling it oversight, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The central government has pulled back the interest rate cu on small saving schemes like public provident fund and national savings certification (NSC) terming it oversight.

The rates on these saving schemes will continue to remain as they were in the January – March quarter.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on twitter said, “”Interest rates of small savings schemes of GoI shall continue to be at the rates which existed in the last quarter of 2020-2021, ie, rates that prevailed as of March 2021. Orders issued by oversight shall be withdrawn.”

PPF and NSC will continue to offer interest of 7.1% and 6.8% for the coming three months.

The government had last cut interest rates a year ago by a sharper 140 basis points for the first quarter of 2020-21.

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Tax-free vs tax-saving instruments – The Hindu BusinessLine

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A coffee time conversation between two colleagues leads to an interesting explainer on tax jargons.

Tina: Have you filed your investment proofs for FY21 yet? The deadline set by the HR team is just around the corner.

Vina: No, I am yet to invest in tax-free instruments for this year.

Tina: What? You mean tax- saving instruments?

Vina: Yeah potato, po-tah-toh! Aren’t they the same thing said differently?

Tina: No. While both tax-free and tax-saving instruments ultimately help in lowering your tax outgo, they aren’t the same.

Vina: Why? What is the difference?

Tina: If you want to save tax on interest or any other incomefrom your investments, you should be investing in a tax-free instrument.

Tax-free bonds issued by State-owned companies such as PFC, NHAI, HUDCO and REC, with a maturity of 10 years or more, are one such example.

You can buy these bonds either during their primary issue or from the secondary market once they get listed.

The existing issues of these bonds currently pay interest rates in the range of 7.6 to 9.0 per cent per annum for varying maturities, and the entire interest income is exempt from tax. Hence, the term ‘tax-free’.

Vina: Oh cool! But in this case, my tax savings are limited only to the extra interest income that I pocket by not having to pay any tax on it, right?

Tina: Yes! If you want to save tax on your existing income, like in your case, you should opt for investing in tax-saving instruments.

Say, your income comes to ₹5 lakh a year. You can invest in certain instruments specified under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act and claim deduction of up to ₹1.5 lakh a year. These include five-year term deposits with banks or the Post Office, deposits in Sukanya Samriddhi Account, contribution to the Public Provident Fund and subscriptions to certain notified NABARD bonds. .

Since investing in these instruments reduces your taxable income and so your tax liability, these are labelled as “tax-saving”.

Remember that income from these tax-saving instruments may or may not be exempt from tax.

Vina: All right, now I get it. They aren’t same at all.

Tina: Yes. Tax-saving instruments help reduce your overall income that is subject to tax, to the extent of investment made. On the other hand, tax-free instruments help you only save tax on the interest income from such instruments.

Vina: Wow, that’s simply put!

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