by Manish Chauhan
Recently, SEBI
has made some of the biggest changes in mutual fund regulations to revive the
mutual fund industry. Some of the measures which are made are said to be
helping AMCs and distributors more than investors. We will look at 6 major changes
done in the meeting and the full detailed circular will come in few days.
1.Higher expense Ratio allowed
Do you know that close to
45% of mutual funds money comes just from Mumbai? Around 87% of AUM in mutual
funds comes from top 15 cities in India, which means that only a minuscule 13%
of the mutual funds money belongs to small cities in India. Penetration in
other parts of country is very, very small and not encouraging. Now SEBI has
proposed to increase the Expense ratio by 30 basis points (0.3%) if the mutual
funds are able to increase their reach to smaller towns in India and increase
their contribution to 30% . In short, if a mutual funds is able to get more
than 30% of its AUM from other than top 15 cities in India, they can charge a
30 basis points expense ratio higher than its current expense ratio. Lower
contribution means proportionately lower expense ratios.
The big effect, is that
now there will be higher expense ratio for everyone. So inflow from smaller
cities will affect investors from bigger cities. Investors from big cities will
have to bear the burden of increased expense ratio.
2. No internal limits in Expense Ratio
A very big change which
goes in favor of AMCs is the removal of internal limits on the expense ratio
and for what it can be used. Earlier there was a limit on the AMC to
charge up to 2.5% expense ratio (up to 100 crores AUM), but it
was allowed to charge only 1.25% as Fund Management Charge and 0.5% as
distribution charges. The rest was taken as their profits. So earlier
suppose a Mutual Fund charged 2.25% as the expense ratio, then they
compulsorily had to allocate 1.25% as Fund Management Charge and 0.5% for
distribution.
But now, that sum limit
has been removed and mutual funds are allowed to allocate expenses the way they
want. This means you can now see more advertisements, more commissions to the distributors and more aggressive
selling. While this is a very big change which will make AMCs happy, they will
still have to keep a check on the expense ratio because of competition from
other AMCs.
3. Putting Exit Loads back into the scheme
You must be wondering what
happened to exit loads earlier, where did it go? When a investor got out
of a mutual funds , he was charged an exit load if he quit before 1 year. That money was
not transferred back to mutual fund, nor was it the profit of the mutual fund.
It was actually transferred to a separate fund, which was used
for sales, distribution and marketing. But now, when a investors exits
prematurely, the entire exit load money will be credited back to the scheme
account and will not be treated as AMC profit. However an equal amount (capped
at 20 basis points) can be included in expense ratio back to compensate the AMC
loss due to outgoing investors, which means that overall, for the investors on
one hand, the AUM gets increased (NAV increased marginally because of
exit load money coming back to them), while at the same time they’re paying
more in expense ratios, so the net effect of this would be, no gain no loss to
both the parties.
4. Direct Plans with lower expense ratio
SEBI has directed that for
each mutual fund, there has to be a equivalent Direct Plan with a lower expense
ratio. So for every mutual fund XYZ, now you will see XYZ and XYZ-Direct
options. So XYZ will come with higher expense ratio, and XYZ-Direct will have
lower expense ratio. Many people who research mutual funds and like to buy it
on their own directly from AMC by passing agents and other online distributors,
this option will be cheaper and makes sense. However, many distributors
are not happy with this move and think this will “kill” their
business, all because investors will then just invest into the direct options.
Note, SEBI has not yet
clarified by how much lower, the expense ratio of the Direct plans will be and
if it will be mandatory for each and every plan or just some categories. We’ll
need to wait for the final circular, to find out.
5. Service Charge will be paid by Investors directly
Earlier the service tax
was borne by mutual funds themselves. But now service tax can be passed to
investors and charged from the AUM of the Fund. Srikanth from
FundsIndia wrote on his blog why it seems fair
SEBI has ruled that
service tax that has thus far been borne by the AMCs can now be passed through
to the investors. Basically, this is how it is done in all other industries.
Anybody who has received an invoice for a service will be familiar with the
“Service tax extra” caveat to the quoted amount. AMCs provide a service (fund
management service) to investors and will rightfully start charging the
investors the requisite amount. This charge, however, is apparently likely to be
2-3 bps (according to the press release). My thought is that this 2-3 bps is
more likely to be the blended overall impact across schemes. For equity
schemes, it is likely to be higher, more in the 7-8 bps range for big funds and
10-12 bps range for smaller funds (service tax is charged on the amount that an
AMC gets to keep from the expense ratio, so it will differ from AMC to AMC and
scheme to scheme).
6. Financial Advisers and Distributors
separation
Very soon,
financial advisor regulation will come into effect. This means, now
there will be some minimum qualification, registration and guidelines for
financial advisers. They will have to register with SEBI and
a separate body of regulators will soon be created for this. A
financial advisor is a professional who advises his clients on investments for
a “fee.” The important distinction being, he wont be able to earn any money
from commissions by selling financial products. If a person wants
to sell financial products and earn commissions out of it, then he will not be
able to “advise” the clients. But CA, MBA, and several other professionals are
kept out of this rule and even mutual fund agents who have a valid ARN code are
kept out of this rule because their basic advice is seen as the extention of
their work. There is still more clarity required on this, so don’t
conclude anything yet.
What does it mean finally
?
If you are wondering what
it means overall in single sentence, then it means increased costs (expense
ratio) and lower returns for investors, but it may not be that bad as you
think. Dhirendra Kumar of Valueresearchonline feels that the
expense ratio increase will be in range of 0.1% to 0.4% range.
All in all, investors
could see a 0.1 to 0.4 per cent increase in the fee that they effectively pay
to have their funds managed. Any increase ends up reducing the returns that
funds generate but all in all, this has been a deftly managed round of reforms
that could get a decent bang for the buck.
Lets see all the changes
and what effect it had finally on different aspects
Criteria
|
Before
|
Now
|
Expense Ratio Charged
|
Maximum 2.5% allowed
(depending on the AUM)
|
Now additional 30 basis
points is allowed if the fresh inflow’s from smaller towns
|
Internal Limits on
Expense Ratio
|
Internal Limits of 1.25%
for Fund Management Charges, 0.5% for distribution costs
|
No internal limits now
|
Where did Exit Load go ?
|
Earliar it went to a
seperate fund used for marketing and sales
|
Will be added back to
Scheme AUM, but will not benefit investors because of equivalent increase in
expense ratio (limited to 20 basis points)
|
Direct Scheme of Mutual
Funds
|
Earliar there was no
distinction between a investment made by agent or directly with AMC
|
A new category called
“Direct” will be introduced which will have a lower expense ratio.
|
Service Tax
|
Borne by AMC
|
Borne by Investors
|
Distinction
between Adviser and Distributor
|
There was no
distinction earlier
|
The regulations are now
coming in . Advisor and Distributer will be separated.
|
What do you think about
these changes ? Which changes do you think are in favor of investors
and which are against them. How will this affect your investments in mutual
funds in coming months and years ? Are you happy about these changes ?
Source: http://www.jagoinvestor.com
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