Who regulates Mutual Fund ?
Securities
Exchange Board of India (SEBI)
What are the benefits of investing in Mutual Funds?
There are several benefits from investing in a Mutual Fund:
Small investments: Mutual funds help you to reap the benefit of returns
by a portfolio spread across a wide spectrum of companies with small
investments.
Professional Fund
Management: Professionals having
considerable expertise, experience and resources manage the pool of money collected
by a mutual fund. They thoroughly analyse the markets and economy to pick good
investment opportunities.
Spreading Risk: An investor with limited funds might be able
to invest in only one or two stocks/bonds, thus increasing his or her risk. However,
a mutual fund will spread its risk by investing a number of sound stocks or
bonds. A fund normally invests in companies across a wide range of industries, so
the risk is diversified.
Transparency: Mutual Funds regularly provide investors with
information on the value of their investments. Mutual Funds also provide complete
portfolio disclosure of the investments made by various schemes and also the
proportion invested in each asset type.
Choice: The large amount of Mutual Funds offer the
investor a wide variety to choose from. An investor can pick up a scheme
depending upon his risk/return profile.
Regulations: All the mutual funds are registered with SEBI
and they function within the provisions of strict regulationdesigned to protect
the interests of the investor
What is NAV?
NAV or Net Asset Value of the fund is the cumulative market value of the assets of the fund net of its liabilities. NAV per unit is simply the net value of assets divided by the number of units outstanding. Buying and selling into funds is done on the basis of NAV-related prices.The NAV of a mutual fund are required to be published in newspapers. The NAV of an open end scheme should be disclosed on a daily basis and the NAV of a close end scheme should be disclosed at least on a weekly basis
Are there any risks
involved in investing in MutualFunds?
Mutual Funds do not provide assured returns. Their returns
are linked to their Performance. They invest in shares, debentures, bonds etc.
All these investments involve an element of risk. The unit value may vary
depending upon the performance of the company and if a company defaults in
payment of interest/principal on their debentures/bonds the performance of the
fund may get affected. Besides incase there is a sudden downturn in an industry
or the government comes up with new a regulation which affects a particular
industry or company the fund can again be adversely affected. All these factors
influence the performance of Mutual Funds.
Some of the Risk to which Mutual Funds are exposed to is
given below:
Market risk
If the overall stock or bond markets fall on account of
overall economic factors, the value of stock or bond holdings in thefund's
portfolio can drop, thereby impacting the fund performance.
Non-market risk
Bad news about an individual company can pull down its stock price, which can negatively affect
fund holdings. This risk can be reduced by having a diversified portfolio that
consists of a wide variety of stocks drawn from different industries.
Interest rate risk
Bond prices and interest rates move in opposite directions.
When interest rates rise, bond prices fall and this decline in underlying securities
affects the fund negatively. Credit risk Bonds are debt obligations. So when
the funds invest in corporate bonds, they run the risk of the corporate
defaulting on their interest and principal payment obligations and when that
risk crystallizes, it leads to a fall in the value of the bond causing the NAV
of the fund to take a beating.
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