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Equity Investing And Return On Net Worth

  One of the biggest advantages of listed equity investing, either through mutual fund route or buying stocks directly - can be done in small ticket size. Is it? Or is this flexibility resulting in sub optimal investor net worth growth? In good many equity mutual funds, one can start dabbling in stocks for just INR 500 a month. And mostly it remains at such piddling amounts. Ok, maybe i am exaggerating. Say this goes by 20 times and monthly investment rises to INR 10k per month in due course. Rarely equity investment amount would be pegged to monthly earning capacity and exceptionally to overall savings (net worth?). No surprises by the end of the investment period, equity investing did not make much difference to overall net worth as return on total wealth did not go up by much as compared to fixed rate investments. A quick example: Say you have INR 25 Lacs to invest for 20 years. Assuming equity investment delivers 12% while fixed rate investment delivers 6% annualized ROI....

Taking Risks With Your Capital: Capacity And Willingness

“Capacity” comes from availability of surplus funds. This part can be dealt objectively and rather quickly as we are dealing with facts as they exist. “Willingness” can be defined as going ahead and deploying a sizable part of available surplus funds into so called “risky” investments such as equity mutual funds. Herein comes subjectivity as one must take decisions results of which will only show up in distant future. Let’s first hit the surplus funds (capacity) part. Say you are a government employee with an assured pension. On your retirement, you get a lump sum amount of INR 1 Crore and an assured pension of INR 1 Lac per month. Let’s say hypothetically your monthly expenses will be very well covered by the pension amount. Academically speaking, you have the “capacity” to go for risky investments to the tune of your surplus capital which here is the lump sum amount of INR 1 Crore. Realistically speaking, if you cannot bring yourself to invest sizeable amount of this corpus - s...

How Much Intermediation Cost In Equity Mutual Funds Is Ok

If you are a DIY (Do It Yourself) oriented person, even one buck is a cost too much. Better to shun any kind of professional involvement and learn the tricks of the trade yourself. And taking this DIY thing to extreme – why bother with the mutual fund route – buy direct stocks through a discount broker and you will be further reducing your cost of investment!!! But WHAT IF you are not sure whether you can be a DIY investor or not? Have a look at my opinion here   and here . These two blogs should give you a broad framework to assess whether you can roll on your own. Now, WHAT IF you decide you can’t be and/or don’t want to be a DIYer and want some professional help.  Or let me put it in a different way – you want to start off your investment journey with some assistance initially, and then evaluate if you can go the DIY way. In such a situation, cost will be a consideration as any kind of intermediation will involve charges, be it through in built commissions or through fe...

Equity Investing: Indexing & Beyond

“Market Linked Investment Returns Work On Probability Not Guarantee”   Simple strategy to have probability of winning on your side - follow the “Forget It” Plan, which is: choose an equity index fund, keep deploying money in the same as per chosen frequency. Of course, deploy decent amount of capital if you want to accumulate sizeable corpus at the end of your investing horizon. And before you start off, decide your horizon (investing + holding period) and the exit strategy too!!!   And then there’s  what I term “The Active Plan”. This is for those who want to generate “better” returns than just tracking the indexes. Let’s call it “The Index Plus” approach. Alternatives for “Index Plus” approach which I can think of:   o    Invest in some stocks directly rather than going through the mutual fund route. If one get’s the right pick, deploys sizeable amount and is able to hold the same till the stock price runs it’s course, returns can be akin to w...

Fair Returns Or Good returns

A conversation between two friends regarding equity mutual fund returns.   M1: Did you check this out? Recent CAMS report on investment in mutual funds by millennials says 36% of mutual fund investors who redeemed in full from equity investments made losses   M2: Yes, have seen the report. Nothing strange, given 50% redeem within 2 years. But there is more to it. CAMS report also says rest make money. Or redeem in profit.   M1:  That's good no. Majority of investors made money…   M2: That's what the data says. Though me thinks data hides more than it reveals   M1: Elaborate on your conspiracy theory on this data please   M2: 1% return is also profit, and so is 5% and 10%   M1: Ohh. Agree, data does not elaborate much on quantum of gains or profit.   M2: Absolutely. Gains per se are irrelevant until and unless we know the quantum and that too in comparison with risk free returns   M1: So at what level of returns should ...

Opportunity Cost & Net Worth

Top of the chart ways to increase investment returns and build a sizeable net worth – timing your entry into an investment or identifying undervalued asset and deploying big bucks into it. Said investment can be anything – a piece of real estate or stocks or anything else. It is another story that getting it spot on consistently is not a piece of cake.   What is easy though is to get a hang of opportunity cost. For starters, it can help you save more, which in turn generates more capital, the raw material for investing. As a bonus, it can also help you direct more money into growth investments. Let the numbers come to our help. Say somehow you are able to squeeze additional savings of just INR 10/- per day. That’s just INR 3650/- per year. Easy no? And you keep doing it day after day for next 25 years. And somehow you are also able to invest this savings into an investment yielding, say 6% per annum. After 25 years, you end up with a tidy sum of INR 2,11,769/- Lacs against a ca...

DIY Investing Part II

  Here  is what I have written earlier about DIY (Do It Yourself) investing. The key point here was what a professional delivers to an investing program and if one can replicate these, DIY is the way to go. This post will make it even simpler if you are in dilemma whether to be a DIY (Do It Yourself) investor or take some professional help. If I have to narrow down to single most important factor to be a success as DIY investor, it boils down to one simple thing – one’s nature, which essentially means:                 Are You A “Natural DIYer” In Your Other Walks Of Life? A true DIYer will find a way to learn the ropes. Google will off course help, and so will some excellent books written on the topic. Though the biggest learning will come by doing, as is with most of other situations. This requires patience and resilience as one will make mistakes on the way. A natural DIYer will take these mista...