Are NPS equity funds finally bringing cheer to investors?

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The National Pension System (NPS) marks another anniversary since opening up for all citizens in May 2009. At this juncture, an assessment of the performance of different investment options under NPS shows that growth investing and high risk appetite seem to have paid off for investors over the long term. The market rally in the last year has played its part too, in pushing up returns in the equity (Scheme E) option under NPS in the short term. The performance of NPS funds over various time periods can be seen in the accompanying table.

Equity wins….

The average returns of Tier I Scheme E funds has outperformed government securities (Scheme G) and other fixed income instruments (Scheme C) over one-, five- and ten-year time frames. But Scheme E under-performed in the three-year period, where government securities (G-Secs) and other fixed income instruments still hold an edge. But NPS being a long-term investment with restricted withdrawal options, investors can depend on equity to deliver the goods, show the numbers.

Scheme E of NPS has also beaten the relevant mutual fund category (large-cap) funds by 90-430 basis points in 1-, 3- and 5-year periods. Even on a ten-year basis, they are almost at par with mutual funds, lagging the average large-cap MF returns by just 35 basis points. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage.

Under the ‘Active’ choice, investors can allocate up to 75 per cent in Scheme E up to the age of 50. Under the ‘Auto’ choice, Scheme E allocation ranges from 5 to 75 per cent based on your age and option chosen (conservative, moderate or aggressive).

….But not enough alpha

There are 7 pension funds (HDFC, ICICI, Kotak, LIC, SBI, UTI & Aditya Birla Sun Life) for the All Citizens Model.

After eating humble pie for some years, investors with a majority of their NPS exposure to equities now can smile. Scheme E invests predominantly in large-cap stocks and its average returns are now better than those of large-cap funds and the BSE 100 TRI. While the polarised market conditions until early 2020 and the sharp fall in February-March 2020 previously dented the performance of Scheme E funds, the rebound last year has taken everybody by surprise.

NPS equity funds may have done well in comparison to relevant mutual funds . But there is room for improvement in terms of alpha (i.e. excess return over benchmark BSE 100 TRI). Over the one-year period, only one among the seven Scheme E funds has beaten their equity benchmark. Over 3-, 5- and 10-year periods, alpha remains weak. One can, of course, argue that large-cap funds, even in MFs, have lagged benchmarks.

The poor alpha generation track-record of NPS equity funds is in contrast to Scheme G and Scheme C funds. Despite G-Secs and other fixed income instruments at this moment losing sheen to equity, they boast of better alpha. All the Scheme G funds have outshined their relevant benchmark across all periods. Scheme C funds have lagged their relevant benchmark in 1- and 3-year periods, but returns are at par in 5- and 10-year periods. Like NPS equity funds, Scheme G and Scheme C funds show comprehensive out-performance over average returns of equivalent mutual fund categories (gilt, medium to long and long duration mutual funds). Scheme G funds took advantage of the fall in long-term bond yields in 2014, 2016 and 2019 to clock good returns. Investing in G-Secs today may lead to lower returns in the short- to medium-term, but with NPS being a long-term investment, returns smoothen out. Also, Scheme G carries near zero default risk.

Scheme C carries slightly higher risk than Scheme G, though funds invest over 80 per cent in AAA-rated bonds. Scheme C funds have not been immune to the turmoil in the corporate bond market. However, over the long term, small losses from such events could be compensated to a good extent by capital appreciation.

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How to retire early without spoiling family’s dreams

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Raghavan, aged 49, and Saraswathi, aged 42, wanted to draft their retirement readiness plan. Raghavan, after a busy corporate life, felt it was time to quit and spend time with family. His daughter Anu (18) had just joined college and son Venkat (16) was in ninth standard.

The accompanying table (Assets) shows his net worth.

His investment assets are ₹5.53 crore. Also, he holds 75 sovereigns of physical gold. Raghavan has been a balanced risk taker over the years. He understands the volatility of equity investments and stayed put over the years to generate reasonable returns from his investment portfolio. He has now exited all his direct equity investments and stuck to mutual funds over the years. He has a sound investment portfolio built over the years, with regular investing.

Family history suggested that the life expectancy number for him and his wife would be 100 years. His family has maintained a modest lifestyle with monthly expense of ₹45,000 per month excluding children’s education expenses.

Goals

Firstly, he needs to maintain one-year expenses as emergency fund in fixed deposits.

Secondly, Anu needs ₹6 lakh towards her college education for the next two years, which is to be maintained as fixed deposits/liquid funds. Also, Anu’s PG needs funding.

Anu’s marriage expenses are estimated to be ₹35 lakh. Anu’s gold gift needs will be met from Raghvan’s current holding of physical gold.

Similar planning for Venkat is also required.

The family needs ₹2.7 crore to manage expenses of ₹50,000 per month for a period of 58 years, till Saraswathi attains 100 years of age.Expected return assumed to be at 8 per cent CAGR.

We suggested they add ₹5,000 per month towards any medical need as additional retirement fund. This may be needed to support any prescription costs, medical helper costs over the years.

It was also suggested that Raghavan keep some corpus towards his property maintenance. His independent house may need reconstruction/renovation as the years pass by.

All his goals are seen in the accompanying table.

Final thoughts

Raghavan is very well positioned to opt for immediate retirement with his modest lifestyle. With the current allocation of 49:51 in equity:debt, he can fund most of his goals without any compromise.

We arrived at a total cost of all his goals to be Rs 6.52 crore. His financial assets are worth Rs 5.53 crore. With long-term equity exposure to goals such as retirement health fund, post retirement vacation fund and property maintenance fund, this corpus is sufficient for him to retire immediately.

Mathematically, for a financial planner, saying ‘yes’ to retirement-ready status to a client is easier.

But there are other behavioural aspects to a peaceful and comfortable retirement. Having worked for more than 25 years with dedication, he was prudent and disciplined while saving for retirement. But he never really bothered to spend time with family or enjoy vacations which have become more important for him now.

This is likely to increase spending in the initial years of his retired life. So, it was advised to look out for regular earning opportunity.

This is basically to protect oneself against unexpected change in financial assumptions such as interest rate, inflation and other surprises such as health needs and lifestyle expenses.

When it comes to retirement readiness, it is always better to exceed the planned corpus by substituting with regular income or allocating additional corpus called ‘retirement fall back fund’.

Hence it was advised that Raghvan take logically sound decisions on spending in the first five years post retirement.

The writer, Co-founder of Chamomile Investment Consultants in Chennai, is an investment advisor registered with SEBI

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Paytm launches ‘Wealth Community’ for young investors

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Home-grown digital financial services platform Paytm has launched a new video-based wealth community called the Paytm Wealth Community.

Paytm Wealth Community is an investing community based on video, and “will enable users to attend live sessions conducted by subject matter experts across an array of wealth topics like Stocks, F&O, IPO, ETFs, Mutual Funds, Gold, Fixed Income, and Personal Finance,” the company said in an official release.

“Users will be able to learn from experts, interact with them to clarify doubts, and also chat with other users on the platform to discuss various wealth-related topics,” it said.

The community is meant to tap young users and has been designed for the needs of the “new Indian investor.”

Artificial Intelligence: Financial services industry behind the curve in meeting customer expectations

In beta mode first

“The next 100mn capital market investors in India are expected to originate from social groups and investment communities. Paytm Wealth Community intends to be the leader in helping users save, invest & trade better,” the company said.

The “intuitive” platform will offer live video content on an interactive chat platform. Creators can conduct 30 to 60-minute sessions in multiple languages like Hindi, English, Gujarati and others.

The Paytm Wealth community is owned and operated by OCL Ltd (Paytm) and is initially being offered in beta mode on the Paytm Money platform. It will be offered in beta for select users for the next two months, followed by open access for all.

A limited set of creators have been onboarded by Paytm in beta. In a bid to ensure the safety of retail investors, all creators go through a comprehensive KYC onboarding and all content is recorded/checked, the company said. Over time, users will be able to create custom discussion rooms, set up their creator accounts and chat.

Paytm Money opens new Technology Development Centre in Pune

Community calendar

Varun Sridhar, CEO of Paytm Money, said, “Paytm Money was a natural choice for the Beta launch of Paytm Wealth Community, given our direct access to the broad investment community and reach across India. The Paytm team has implemented cutting edge video & community technology ensuring the platform is seamless, and the user communication is safe and secure. We are very excited by the potential positive impact it will have on how users engage, learn and invest.”

Users who have received access to the Paytm Wealth Community can explore the community calendar, which lists out all upcoming sessions and their details on the Paytm Money app. They can also share sessions on various social media platforms. Other interested users can download or update their Paytm Money app to the latest version and follow Paytm Money on social media platforms to get access to the live session links.

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PhonePe launches ESOPs worth $200 m for its employees

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PhonePe to launch ESOPs for its 2,200 employees. The $200 million Stock Option Plan gives every PhonePe employee the chance to own a part of the company and benefit from its success. Mobile Premier League, Wakefit, ShareChat and Licious are some of the other start-ups which have recently announced ESOPs.

Manmeet Sandhu, Chief People Officer, PhonePe said, “The PhonePe Stock Option Plan is a core component of our compensation philosophy crafted to encourage collaboration, long-term focus and organisation-first thinking. PhonePe is on a mission to use technology as a transformational force that is making financial inclusion real for every Indian. We believe when money and services flow freely, everyone progresses.”

“By having ESOPs at a minimum of $5000 for all levels, we enable every employee in the organisation to participate in the wealth generation opportunity they have helped create — Karte Ja, Badhte Ja. As roles become more senior, ESOPs are a part of the annual compensation for employees, translating into a larger component of their compensation being tied to the organisation’s success. This encourages everyone to put the organisation first. The organisation’s success is their success,” Sandhu said.

PhonePe had just under 500 employees who were under the ESOPs plan as of December 2020. In an interaction with BusinessLine in December 2020, Sameer Nigam, founder and CEO of PhonePe said, back in the day, all employees were shareholders. My father worked at Larsen & Toubro and a significant part of the company was owned by the employees. In the start-up sector, young people have done really well for themselves but its been concentrated on the tech and business side of the functions. I think by ensuring that all our customer service agents and all our sales force last-mile employees will also get to participate in the wealth creation is a bit of a paradigm change in a good way as it is more participative. I’m excited about somebody in my sales team in Bhopal who has 3.5-4 lakhs worth of equity see it double in the next few years – that’s a game changer. With this, I hope attrition will go down on those functions.

 

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Valuations out of comfort zone: What you should do now

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A famous law in economics — Stein’s Law– states, “If something cannot go on for ever, it will stop”.

With the Sensex touching the 50,000 mark last week, one thing on every one’s mind is this – will the exuberance continue or will the markets succumb to Stein’s law? In this column we analyse two metrics that investors can keep track of to judge the market situation.

Buffet Indicator

In an interview in 2001, legendary investor Warren Buffet noted that the single best measure of where valuations stand at any moment was the ratio of market capitalisation of all listed securities as a percentage of GNP. This has subsequently become famous as the Buffet Indicator. Since in many cases there is no significant difference between GNP and GDP, the market capitalisation by GDP is more commonly used.

According to Buffet, in the context of US economy, if the percentage relationship falls to the 70-80 per cent levels it’s good time to buy. If the ratio approaches 200 per cent as it did in 1999-2000 during the dotcom bubble, investors were ‘playing with fire’.

Of course, it was playing with fire as those who remained invested in the benchmark Nasdaq index at those levels of market cap-to-GDP, saw 77 per cent of their investment value burnt from the peak of the bubble in March 2000 to its bottom in October 2002.

Right now the market capitalisation-to-GDP in the US is around 190 per cent — right in the ‘playing with fire’ zone. Given that financial events in the US always impact the rest of the world, this poses risk for stock markets across the world. .

Where does India fare in this metric? India’s current market cap-to-GDP is around 100 per cent now. While this might appear lower than the ratio in US, we need to see this in the context of our economy and history.

Our market cap-to-GDP peaked at around 149 per cent in December 2007, and the Nifty 50 index fell 60 per cent from those levels by March 2009, falling back to a ratio of a little above 60 per cent of the annual GDP at that time. Since then, the highest we have reached is 105 times in 2017 Given our history, the Buffet Indicator for India is signalling over valuation. Every time it has crossed the 80 to 90 per cent levels, markets have either crashed or atleast underperfomed risk free options. While it might be lower than the ratio in the US, one needs to factor in that we have an unorganised sector that makes up 50 per cent of the GDP and our corporate profits to GDP ratio is about half the levels prevailing in the US.

Trailing PE ratio

Historically, Indian markets have always cracked or underperfomed sooner or later after benchmark Nifty50 index nears/crosses trailing PE of around 24 times. In the peak of the Y2K/dotcom bubble, it traded up to a PE of 29 times in February 2000. From the peak level of 1,756 then, the Nifty 50 corrected by around 50 per cent as the bubble burst and unwound.

In the housing bubble driven bull market of 2007-08, it traded up to a PE of 24 times in January 2008 and subsequently the index witnessed wealth destruction of around 60 per cent as the entire world faced consequences of the sub-prime crisis created by the housing bubble. Currently, the trailing PE of Nifty 50 is at a historical high and mind boggling 36 times. Even if one were to be very generous and take an EPS 20 per cent higher (closer to FY20 consensus EPS estimates prior to covid-disruption) to adjust for Covid impact on earnings, it trades at around 29 times – levels from which it crashed in 2000.

While in general the logic is that markets look to the future and one should look at forward PE, trailing PE has been historically a good indicator from an index level. The reasons being forward earnings is built more on expectations which may or may not pan out, and the other reason being forward earnings cannot be disconnected from trailing earnings. While there might be individual cases of earnings differing vastly from trailing levels, at an aggregate or index level it is usually not the case.

Historically, trading at over stretched PE ratios has had severe consequences. For example, the main index in China SSE Composite traded up to a PE of over 40 times in 2007 as equity mania rose to historic proportions there. This culminated in a correction of more than 70 per cent. Despite robust economic growth since then, the index is still 40 per cent below its peak of 2007, nearly 14 years later. It trades at humbling PE of around 18 times today.

What this means to you

While market pundits and fund managers you watch on TV might justify these valuations by pointing to record low interest rates, they are sharing only half the truth.

The other part which is not explicitly explained is that interest rates are low because economic growth is low. Low growth will result in low earnings growth. In the long term stock markets have always been a function of earnings growth and interest rates. They are likely to perform worst when interest rates are high and earnings growth is low. They perform best when interest rates are low and earnings growth is high. Hence the current scenario where interest rates and earnings growth are low is not a case for all time high valuations.

Whether it is the Buffet Indicator or the PE ratio, the indications clearly are that Indian markets are in over-heated territory. That means it is time for you to be prudent in your equity allocation, plan for the long-term and not follow the herd for quick profits. As the famous quote from ‘The Dark Knight’ goes – ‘You either die a hero or live long enough to become the villain’. Bull markets usually choose the latter. One must invest wisely to not get trapped by the villain.

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