Thursday, 21 February 2013

5 Tips To Enter The Investing World

If you want your money to grow and make you rich, you need to invest it. Think out of the box and experiment with the papers (or so called currencies) in your pocket. As Oscar Wilde said, "Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination."

Save Some Money To Begin With:
Build an emergency fund and start saving. This amount should be enough if you meet any financial loss in the near future. Once you are done with it, and then start keeping some money aside after your monthly expenses, which will make your way into the investment world.

Gain Some Financial Knowledge:
Don't be afraid if you don't about making money with investments. What you lack is only knowledge. Rest all you have got. Don’t be shy to discuss about money matters with your elders or friends. Meet a financial advisor. Explain what and how much asset you have got and how you want to use to make wealth.

Do a Proper Homework:
Don’t pretend that the knowledge gained from a financial advisor will make you wise enough to read the pulse of the market. Do not be overconfident. Sit and analyze the market. Keep a proper track of popular stocks.

Be Ready To Take Risk:
Risk is a formidable factor of the stock market. But you should be open to take risk to gamble in the market. It is not recommended to take a high risk. Being in the market you can also face loss. Even in such case, you should not think and regret about it for long. Learn from your experience, and rectify the faults and re-enter the market.

Don't Go With the Trend:
Once you know to sense the market, don't tend to ignore analyzing the market. There is always new new information roaming in the market. Neither believe them nor disrespect them. Evaluate the facts and cross check to come to an conclusion. Just don’t go with the trend. Just don’t follow because others are following it. This can be a biggest mistake of yours; even bigger than taking risk.

Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Is Financial Planning the Right Career for You?


Take this quiz to help you find out:


1. How comfortable are you with making sales?
A. I could sell my grandmother a ticket to a SuperNova concert with no guarantee that she'll enjoy the performance.
B. I could sell my grandmother that SuperNova ticket, but I would feel guilty if she didn't like the show.
C. Only a bad person would sell his or her grandmother a SuperNova ticket.

2. At what stage of life are you?
A. I just graduated from college.
B. I've been out of school for a few years.
C. I've been in my line of work for several years, but I'm ready for a change.

3. How much of an extrovert are you?
A. I have been the president of nearly every club I have ever joined.
B. I have enough friends to make me happy.
C. A good book, a room to myself and no interruptions is my idea of heaven.

4. You could be described as:
A. both analytically and a good communicator.
B. analytically, but not a good communicator, or a good communicator, but not analytically.
C. neither analytically, nor a good communicator.

5. At work, I prefer to do my job:
A. completely independently
B. somewhat independently.
C. as part of a team.

6. What appeals most to me about becoming a planner is:
A. the challenge of building a client base.
B. the creation of my own business.
C. the analysis of investments.


7. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median annual income for financial planners was $64,750 in 2010 - this includes commission income. How do you feel about that?
A. I've never been average and I'll earn more than the median.
B. That would work for me.
C. Working for commissions only makes me nervous


Results
If you answered mostly "As", then financial planning could be the right career for you. You're energized, not terrified, by the idea of earning a substantial amount of your compensation through commissions. If you have the right connections and the energy level to work that network, you could succeed in this tough career.

If you answered mostly Bs, then you need a back-up plan. Financial planning might work, but you're likely to end up among the 80% of planners who, according to William F. Cole's "The Complete Financial Advisor," is in the business for less than five years. When sales don't work out, what will you do next and how will you sell yourself to your next employer?
If you answered mostly Cs, don't even think about financial planning. If you love the portfolio analysis side, consider working as a financial analyst. If math is your strong subject, go into financial engineering or quantitative analysis. You'll make more money without having to sell all day long.  

Friday, 8 February 2013

Does checking your CIBIL report pull down your credit score?


When Ishaan Patkar, a Mumbai-based banker wanted to apply for a top-up loan a couple of years after he took a home loan, his loan agent stopped him from getting his personalized credit score.
"The loan agent said that it would bring my credit score down. I was scared. So I did not apply," said Patkar. This is a very common myth doing rounds in the country today.
When someone tells you a "funda" like that think twice. It's your own score. A credit report shows your credit worthiness. If you do not have a right over it nobody does. What you need to know is that your credit score goes down if more than one lender pulls up your score constantly. You personalized credit score from Credit Information Bureau of India Limited (Cibil) will give you a list people who pulled out your score recently.
In fact by making a loan application you are indirectly giving a lender the right to check your credit worthiness. So, it is also necessary to make sure that a lender is not pulling up their credit report without your consent.
It is imperative that individuals check their credit report regularly to make sure it's up to date and accurately reflects their circumstances. Mistakes can hurt their credit rating. If there are any inaccuracies in your report, raise a dispute immediately.
Get in touch with a bank that has not updated your records. In worst cases banks can be penalized too if they refuse to correct your records.
These days, everybody who cares about their financial health has to check their credit score periodically. Globally telecom companies, insurance companies and in many landlords too check the credit worthiness of an individual before they take on a customer or a tenant.
So keep a control of who is watching your credit score. Make sure you logon to the Cibil website periodically to get a personalized credit score. Stay financially healthy and happy.
- Source creditvidya.com

Thursday, 7 February 2013

Capital markets critical for overall economic growth


Capital markets refer to segments of financial system that help enterprises raise long-term capital by way of equity or debt. In turn, they also help savers to invest their money optimally in productive enterprises. Capital markets comprise financial institutions, banks, stock exchanges, mutual funds, insurance companies, financial intermediaries or brokers etc.

A growing economy like India, where more than 15 million youth are added to workforce every year, needs huge investment on a continuous basis for new capacity as well as for expansion, renovation and modernization of existing productive capacity and creation of supporting infrastructure. This investment, technically referred to as ‘gross capital formation’, is crucial to sustain growth. Economists work out capital output ratio by computing units of capital required to produce a unit of additional incremental output. In the Indian context, the capital output ratio has historically been around 4, i.e. 4 units of capital are required to produce one unit of incremental output. Therefore, to sustain growth of 8% per annum, we need new investments or gross capital formation of 32% per annum. In other words to sustain growth, we need capital to invest. And to raise capital, we need an efficient capital market. Therefore, capital markets are critical for the country’s overall economic growth. There is broad consensus that macroeconomic policy framework should be conducive for the development and efficient working of the capital markets.

However, the development of capital markets poses its own challenges. If not overseen properly, capital markets can be vulnerable to frauds, volatility, and excessive speculation. Capital markets mobilize savings of naive investors, directly and indirectly. For policy makers, the conundrum is therefore to strike a balance between pace and order, sophistication and transparency, and regulations and simplicity.

Over the past two decades, Indian regulators have taken the path towards tighter regulations. As a result, in relative terms, our capital markets have been less vulnerable to crises or frauds. Quite justifiably, our regulators and government officials are proud about this. We have a robust regulatory structure in place for the capital markets. However, the flip side is that they are not geared to meet the capital requirement to realize the growth potential of the economy. India has tremendous potential to sustain higher economic growth compared with China because of favorable demographics and the enterprising nature of its people. India can sustain double-digit economic growth for at least a couple of decades more, which can lift millions of people out of poverty as has been the case with China, Singapore, and many other countries.

Let us separately look at equities and debt, the two major parts of the capital markets.

Our debt markets are evolving slowly and quite far from being mature, with multi-tier structure to handle risks and enable large capital flows. Several government committees have been appointed to look into this and develop corporate bond markets. However, very little has happened at the ground level. The absence of an efficient debt market has become a major constraint for new investments, especially in infrastructure, where debt component of a project is significantly higher. Given an underdeveloped corporate bond market and regulatory restrictions on deposits by non-banking sectors, a bulk of intermediation in the debt market is per force through the banking channels. The cost of intermediation in our country is perhaps the highest in the world. Typically, a good individual saver earns 4% p.a. whereas a good corporate borrower pays 12% p.a. A fair, market-linked, inflation-proof and risk-free return will go a long way in reducing the diversion of savings to unproductive asset classes such as gold and real estate. In today’s world, such spreads can exist only with regulatory protections because free markets elsewhere in the world have driven it down to a few basis points. Our policy makers would justify this as a social obligation to the agriculture and SME sectors. However, relative to their urban counterparts, our farmers have become much poorer since independence and the Indian SME sector is much worse than its global counterpart as far as availability of capital is concerned.

The bigger policy conundrum pertains to equities markets. Our policy makers need to understand and appreciate that:

a) Equities are risky but very crucial to sustain high economic growth.
b) There can be no equities markets without financing and speculation.

Equity investing is perceived as risky and akin to gambling. One should not forget that the risk capital or equity capital forms the base on which enterprises can leverage and raise debt capital. Without equities, no project can even be conceived. Therefore, a healthy equity market forms the foundation for an efficient capital market. It will also benefit individual investors over the long term as the equities market can generate 15-18% p.a. tax-free retruns compared with 7-8% returns p.a. in fixed income assets.
We have the most benign fiscal policy structure for the equities capital market. Return on Equity by way of dividend and capital gains is either tax-free or attracts lower tax rate compared with interest income. The same has not been effective nor will schemes such as Rajeev Gandhi Equity Investment will yield much results. This is evident from the fact that only 4% of household savings is directed to equities and retail penetration and participation continues to be weak. We are overly dependent on investment from Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) of US$20-25bn p.a, even though our domestic savings are more than US$400bn.

Equity investors are not lured by sops but expectations of above-normal profit which obviously will entail higher risk as well. We can have a conducive environment for equities only when our policy makers appreciate that neither super profit nor super loss (even to a small investor) by itself is a bad word. My favorite analogy is of a Church priest who becomes a football referee and does not want players to be violent, wants them to avoid injuries and follow queue discipline. No doubt, the game of football has to have rules of fair play. There are fouls and penalties for pushing, tripping, and rough tackling but normal injuries and aggression are an essential part of the game. In equities, although excessive speculation or manipulation has to be punishable but volatility, speculation and losses to investors, small or big, are part of the game.

It appears that our policy makers perceive all financing, intra-day, and speculative activities as undesirable or evil elements and want to encourage only genuine investors. The interesting paradox is that, investors can be attracted only in a market with financiers and speculators. Typically, equity shareholders are owners who do not directly manage the company’s affairs. For them, liquidity or an easy option to exit is important. World over, in the equities markets, liquidity is provided not by genuine investors but by traders, speculators, and arbitragers who essentially need financiers. The rapid growth of the derivative market also corroborates the same characteristic of the equity capital markets. The genuine investment transactions among investors are so rare and even a blue chip trades only a few times in a month. For instance, millions of shares are traded in a stock like Infosys; but the buyers and sellers are not those who have simultaneously got excited and unexcited about valuation and long-term potential of the IT sector and on Infosys as a company.

Although manipulation is not healthy, lack of liquidity will prevent growth and participation. Our regulators frown on speculation and on financing. SEBI’s margin funding guidelines are too onerous to secure any meaningful response. RBI has put several restrictions on bank’ finance to the capital markets and it discourages capital market financing by NBFCs.

As we look at the next five years, to get our infrastructure ready to sustain growth, the magnitude of capital required is staggering. Our policy makers need to have clarity on the macroeconomic objective, which to my mind can be: we need to encourage directing savings into equities, particularly from retail investors. We should reduce our dependence on FII hot money, which causes greater volitility in the market. We need more competition, more products and easy regulations in the debt markets and in banks. The fiscal, monetary, and all other policy framework should recognise this and be conducive.




The above views were expressed in the December 2012 edition of the Boston Consulting Group – Confederation of Indian Industry publication on Deepening of Capital Markets: Enabling Faster Economic Growth 

Saturday, 2 February 2013


What is Financial Planning


“Financial Planning is the process of meeting your life goals through a systematic and disciplined arrangement of your personal finances.”
With the above definition, we realize three main things.
  1. Financial Planning is a Process
  2. It’s about Your Life Goals and,
  3. It’s about disciplined arrangement of your personal finances.
Let’s see the first step in this process.

What is financial planning

Financial Planning is a process consisting different steps. Look at the image below.


1.    Determine your current financial situation

You may be a salaried person, a professional or a businessman, check your current financial situation. Where are you now?
  • Do you have enough savings and investments to back your aspirations?
  • Is your salary enough to pursue your personal and financial aspirations?
  • Are you able to manage your home loan and personal loan responsibilities?
Ask these questions to yourself. Be very clear and honest with your current financial situation.

2.    Develop your financial goals

What financial goals you want to achieve?
  • Retire at 50?
  • Be debt free at 40?
  • Want to invest in a second home?
  • Want to go abroad for further studies?
  • Want to send your children abroad for further studies?
  • Daughter’s marriage?
The list is endless.
Where to start?
Start with important goals first, that can give you financial independence. How about being a debt-free at 40? I know some people who are debt-free at 35.
It’s possible and it needs a disciplined and systematic planning.

3.    Identify alternative courses of action

What alternative actions you can take to achieve your financial goals?
I believe some actions like learning good saving habits, learning your relationship with money, living frugally and keeping positive mindset are some of the ways that help you achieve your financial goals.

4.    Evaluate alternatives

Consider your current life situation, your personal values and economic factors. Also assess risk and time value of money of each alternative.
Here, you should check different products available in market and select the best ones based on your need. You may need to do some changes in your lifestyle so that you achieve your financial and life goals that are close to your heart.

5.    Create and implement your financial action plan

Once you take all the five steps mentioned above, you will get a clear idea about your financial goals and what you need to do to achieve them.
The key words here are implementation and action.
The plan remains on paper if you don’t implement it. So take the first step and rest will follow.

6.    Review and revise the financial plan

As you go and implement your financial plan, you should revise your plan periodically, every 6 months or whenever you achieve a milestone.
This step is the last step in the financial planning process.

How personal financial planning is different from corporate finance?


The jargons used are same but meaning is different.
For example, when you use the word ‘Net Worth’ in corporate finance, it’s about company’s capital plusreserves and surplus.
Likewise, a person’s net worth is his total assets minus total liabilities.

Can I create my own financial plan?

Yes. If you follow these steps and do a bit of calculation, you can create your own financial plan and you don’t need to hire any financial planner for this.


Friday, 1 February 2013

Essentials of unsecured loans!


There are several types of unsecured loans available in the market which a person can opt for when in dire requirement of money. However before availing any of the unsecured loans one needs to understand the intricacies involved and the pitfalls that must be guarded against in such loans.

What are Unsecured Loans?
Essentially the unsecured loans are those types of loans where the borrower does not have to provide any kind of security or collateral against the money being taken from the bank. The secured loans require some kind of security which acts as a guarantee against defaults in loan repayment.

Types of Unsecured Loans
There are 3 basic types of unsecured loans prevalent in India currently.

Personal Loans: These are loans given to individuals for short durations without any specific purpose attached thereof with reasonably high rate of interest. The income and repayment capacity of the individual are the only criteria for providing such loans.

Credit Card: This arrangement refers to the ability of people to buy goods or services using plastic money which they have to recoup within a specified period of time after which they shall be charged a certain interest on the dues.

Loans against Credit Cards: Credit card holders are offered loans against their cards in terms of cash advances at a prohibitively high rate of interest.

Typical Interest Rates of Unsecured Loans
Type of Loan
Rate of Interest
Use of Funds
Personal Loan
12% – 24%
Unrestricted
Credit cards
18-40%
Flexible

Reasons for availing Unsecured Loans
These are some of the situations in which one should opt for unsecured loans:
  • When you are sure about being able to repay within a short span of time without incurring too much interest.
  • Unforeseen urgent requirement of funds which cannot be met from any other sources. These circumstances may include emergency conditions like medical expenses etc.
  • Short term funding acquiring assets or secured investments when you are sure to get your capital back in time to repay the unsecured loan.
Risks Associated with Unsecured Loans
Apart from the inherent risks that the financier faces while disbursing unsecured loans there are some risks for the borrower which he must appreciate:
  • Extremely high rates of interest involved in the unsecured loans imply that a huge amount will have to be repaid back by the time the loan tenure ends.
  • Since the unsecured loans are for shorter tenures the EMI shall be high and there will be high penalties involved in case of defaults the chances of the borrower landing up in debt trap is also high.
  • In case the borrower is unable to keep up the payments and defaults in between his credit ratings will also be adversely affected that shall affect his chances of securing loans in the future too.
As far as possible one should stay away from such unsecured loans with high interest rates unless the requirement is pressing with no other option. One has to keep the penalty factors in mind and carefully calculate the repayment possibilities while taking such a loan. Before taking the loan and whenever unable to make timely payment the only golden mantra that the borrower should stick to is – “Negotiate and Negotiate”.