Equity Investment Without Risk

merck

New Member
#1
Esteemed Readers,

I would like to share with you all an interesting article that I have come across.

Everyone knows that investing in equity is risky. However, the risk taking abilities of investors vary. Some don’t think twice before investing everything including the kitchen sink in equities. And yet there are the risk averse others who cannot bear losing even a rupee of their capital. Most of us are somewhere in between.

But what if one could invest in equities with the guarantee of not losing capital? In other words, what if you could have your cake and eat it too? I know, most of you must be thinking such a thing isn’t possible--- such a Utopia doesn’t exist. (Also read - Learn how to tackle risk through diversification)

Through this article, I will introduce the readers to precisely such a utopia. And I am not even talking about the capital guaranteed schemes launched by various mutual funds. These schemes apart from being close ended will invest a large proportion of funds in fixed income instruments, thereby making the return comparable at best with a well-to-do MIP scheme.



Instead, I am referring to pure unadulterated equity pleasure without taking a single iota of risk as far as loss of capital is concerned. To know how, read on.

Here’s what must you do. Invest Rs 6 lakhs in the Post Office Monthly Income Scheme (POMIS). POMIS gives interest at the rate of 8% p.a., which means per year you would receive Rs 48,000. Since it’s a monthly income scheme, the interest per month works out to Rs 4,000. Now, this is fully taxable. Assuming you are in the 30% tax bracket, the net balance after tax left with you would be Rs. 2,800.

Now, enter into an SIP with this amount of Rs 2,800. POMIS is a six-year scheme. So basically, you would invest Rs 2,800 per month for six years. At the end of six years, you would receive the market value of your mutual fund investment and also the capital amount of Rs 6 lakhs invested in POMIS.

Consequently, while you have kept your capital intact, you still have taken on equity with all its associated risk.

To see how this strategy can actually work out, we ran some numbers. Say you started your POMIS account in September 2000. The monthly interest was invested in Reliance Growth Fund on an SIP basis. By adopting this simple structure, at the end of six years, the investor would have received around Rs 9.45 lakhs just on account of the mutual fund investment. Add to it the capital amount of Rs 6 lakhs of POMIS and the total investment would net a cool Rs 15 lakhs. And this is after tax and without an iota of risk.

So who needs capital guaranteed funds!!

Anyway, the point that I continuously make through my write-ups is that mutual fund investing is all about the long-term. We have seen how an SIP of Rs 2,800 per month has grown to a phenomenal Rs 9.45 lakhs. However, the key here is that the investor kept up his investments for all of the six years, month after month, year after year. (Also read - How to build your MF portfolio?)

How many of us have invested in a mutual fund six years back? And more importantly, how many of us still remain invested? The answer would most probably be none.

The reason in all probability is because we invest and disinvest based on what happens in the world around us. In other words, we react to world events. Though I am not much of a crystal ball gazer, here’s what I think will happen in the next six years.

The US Fed will raise interest rates. The US Fed will lower interest rates. Oil prices will rise and oil prices will fall. Commodity prices will fall. Commodity prices will rise. FIIs will intermittently pull out of Indian markets only to fall over themselves to get in once again. (Did someone say that this was smart money?) There will be sub-prime, terror strikes. There will be political upheavals, both nationally and internationally.

These things have taken place before our times, during our times and will take place after our times also. For, that is the way of the world. In the meanwhile, your personal net worth will solely depend upon how you react or more appropriately don’t react to these events. In another piece, we will discuss the reasons one should sell one’s mutual fund. But none of the same appear in this article.

You want to win in the markets. Take the following words of Calvin Coolidge to heart ---"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent."

A six-year SIP was persistent enough. And look how much money it made.

Sandeep Shanbhag



Merck

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
==============================================================
This article was written by Sandeep Shanbhag source at www.moneycontrol.com

Sandeep Shanbhag is the Director of A N Shanbhag NR Group, a Mumbai based tax and investment advisory firm.
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merck

New Member
#3
36 views and still no comments.

I request the veterans and experts of the forum to kindly enlighten us beginners with their views on this article of investing.


thanks,
Merck
 

SwingKing

Well-Known Member
#4
Merck,

Thanks for the useful post. Neither do I agree nor do I disagree with this article. Every investment advisor is free to promote what he feels is right. It depends on person to person and that should not be a topic of debate. However there is one important point for everyone to take from this well written article and that is,

"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent."

I think determination, dedication and discipline are recipes to success in every field. The problem is, not many can bring these three together.

Tc.
 
#5
I have been reading numerous threads in this forum for almost 6 months now. This is the first time I felt like writing a post. You have hit the nail on the head. Thank you for an excellent piece of advice.
 

merck

New Member
#6
Merck,

Thanks for the useful post. Neither do I agree nor do I disagree with this article. Every investment advisor is free to promote what he feels is right. It depends on person to person and that should not be a topic of debate. However there is one important point for everyone to take from this well written article and that is,

"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent."

I think determination, dedication and discipline are recipes to success in every field. The problem is, not many can bring these three together.

Tc.
Thank you.
 

moti

New Member
#7
you don't consider real statstics to inflation and depericiation of rupree buying power in market which is effectable after six years or so.
 

merck

New Member
#8
Valid point. I think the author of this article was providing an alternative to capital-safe mutual fund investments. I believe there are funds that target protecting your principal against the ravages of inflation too.

A section for conservative investors is where such investment reciepies can be posted and discussed imho.

Merck
 
#9
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When one looks outside the box(inventor), goes against the group(thinks for self), said they found(developed) something that is supposed to be impossible(airplanes), they were once killed. Now these people are called bad names and delegated to be unheard, and ignored group.

The ultimate business solution. The ability to cut the cost of any business expense, or just plain invest.

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Thomas Adair
[email protected]
 
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Goofy

Well-Known Member
#10
Juat a quip: What about locked money for years? What about standing in Q of 70 years old retirees in sultry heat in an Indian Post Office still operating under stone-age methods? What about giving up control on your money to a fat mutual fund manager who like a proverbial monkey distributes the profit among cats?
Share trading has nothing to do with certainty of making money. Hell, anyone thinking to go into trading for making money is heading straight to the pit. It's about living at the edge of life. Dangereous, heartbreaking sometimes, but eventually fullfiling to the one who holds on.
My uncle who's been trading for last 20 years or so summed it best: "if I have to burn my money, I don't need help from a Suit and Tie.

All the best