|
Written by Ranjan
|
|
Friday, 30 April 2010 16:35 |
|
Why do you invest in an equity mutual fund? The answer might be quite obvious at first, but certainly deserves deeper thought. One may invest to take advantage of the higher returns that equities are supposed to give over the long run. But if that is the only motive, than why not invest in an index fund?
|
|
Click for more info!
|
|
|
Written by Gopal Gidwani
|
|
Thursday, 17 December 2009 07:03 |
|
Rahul is a worried father these days. His daughter’s marriage is planned 6 months down the line. He had big plans to buy a lot of gold for his daughter like any father would do in a normal Big Fat Indian Wedding. But the way gold prices have soared in the last 1 year from levels of Rs 10,000+ per 10 grams to the current Rs 18,000+ per 10 grams, Rahul is in a fix. Even after such a big rise in prices in such a short span of time, gold prices show no signs of stopping. Rahul is wondering whether he would be able to buy the quantity of gold he had originally planned to buy at these prices. If we sit back and analyse the reasons behind the tear away rally in gold prices we will have to move back in time by 2 years.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
Written by Ranjan
|
|
Monday, 06 August 2007 11:30 |
Basically, ETFs are open-ended index fund that can also be traded on the stock market.
Compared to Mutual funds, there are many advantages of ETFs, one is real time pricing, secondly long term investors are protected from short term traders. Hence it proves to be an ideal instrument for both long term as well as short term investors and also it is easy to buy and sell from the exchange. One major disadvantage of ETF is that the investor should have a demat account and a broking account.
There are two types of advantages over index funds - one is the expense ratio which is currently lower in ETFs as compared to normal index funds. The second advantage is the distribution costs- the other index funds have to pay trail commission to the broker, while ETF does not pay the same. So the ETF cost will be lower.
In addition to the above-mentioned expenses, there also exist some `hidden' costs like transaction costs. Such costs do not form a part of the expense ratio like brokerage and STT. The transaction costs however, are incurred by index funds but not by ETFs. This is another area where ETFs score over regular index funds.
ETFs don't incentivise their product, which other regular mutual funds can do, hence there is no one pushing it.
But internationally what has happened that over a period of time people have found out that ETFs are ideal instruments and it has become more popular.
Just to give an example - in the last three month if you look at the Nifty BeES, among all forty funds it was ranked 11th in the down market, which clearly shows that the ETFs/index funds are working. |
|
Last Updated on Tuesday, 07 August 2007 00:30 |
|
Read more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|