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Industry : Hedge Funds/VCs/Private Equity Functional Area : India
Activity:  1 comments  460 views  last activity : 07 06 2010 20:18:04 +0000
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Can Promises of Highest NAV Guarantee Deliver?

Insurance companies have launched a spate of funds promising investors a guarantee of the highest NAV achieved. Can these schemes deliver what they are promising?

Nice Informative article by Dhirendra Kumar, of www.valueresearchonline.com

Over the last few months, one after another, a number of insurance companies have launched ULIPs which promise to repay the investor on the basis of the highest NAV that the fund has achieved. The pitch is that these funds' NAV effectively does not drop. Once a level is achieved, then the investor is assured of getting at least as much, no matter what happens to the market. It's certainly a very attractive idea. From the way insurance companies are stampeding into launching such products, I'm sure investors must be putting down their money in good numbers-in just a couple of months, six insurance companies have launched such products. Any investor who is told of this concept will immediately start salivating at the thought. Imagine how rich you could have been had you been invested over the last ten years and had been able to lock your investments at the magical value that the markets achieved on the day when the Sensex touched 20,873!

Any investor thinking about this product would say, "What a wonderful idea!" Why don't all investment schemes-whether mutual funds or ULIPs or even portfolio management schemes offer this kind of a protection on all their products anyway. The answer to this obvious question is simple. There is no free lunch. These products don't actually offer what you think they are offering. That is, they do not offer equity returns that never fall. Instead, they offer an investment system with a very long lock-in (seven to ten years) in which protection is achieved by progressively putting your gains in a fixed income assets which will give returns far more slowly than a pure equity option. The lock-in and the non-equity assets make this a very different kind of investment than the equity-gains-without-losses dream that these funds' advertising seems to imply.

However, even that's not the real reason that these funds are useless. The real reason is that if you are willing to lock-in for seven to ten years, then practically any equity mutual fund would deliver this dream of equity-gains-without-losses. Seven years is a very long time. Over such a period practically any equity portfolio into which any kind of thought has gone would capture substantial gains. This is not mere conjecture. Since at least 1997 the minimum total return that the Sensex has generated over its worst seven is 12 per cent, which was over the seven year period from 6th July 1997 to 5th July 2004. The truth is that in a growing economy like India's it's extremely hard to lose money over a long period like seven years. If you are willing to lock in your money for seven years, then for all practical purposes, you have a guarantee of making a profit.

Of course, this is not a guarantee that is signed in a contract and legally enforceable, but it's the kind of guarantee that any thoughtful investor would be willing to believe in. Mind you, this is also not a guarantee that you will get the highest NAV achieved but again, that's the kind of thing that can't be attained if you want the gains of pure equity anyway.

The most instructive thing in this whole business of guaranteed highest NAV products is the contrast between the illusions spun by those peddling complex financial products and the reality of simple, straightforward investing. It just reinforces one's belief that financial products are being designed whose goal is nothing more than to create a marketing hype which can manipulate the psychology of the ordinary saver.

-- Dhirendra Kumar

 Top Comment : Padmanabhan R   | 03 29 2010 10:27:36 +0000
Thanks Vijay Bhatia sir, nice sharing. An eye opener. There is little, if not no doubt about long term investments in stocks a country growing at 8 -9% giving a considerable return. And, again in the case ulips, much value is derived from the insurance aspect associated and are not advisable from a sole investment point of view.
 
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2 comments on "Beware of highest-NAV Schemes"
  Commented by  Japan Shah, Assistant Professor, Omegan School of Business    | 03 30 2010 05:58:39 +0000
Dear Mr. Veejay, Thanks for the referral, but the fact is the people are heavily investing in this scheme and are also referring their friends for the same.
The problem today is that the insurance companies have such a huge sales force that they sell any bad product on any given day... There is lot of ignorance among the investors...
  Commented by  Padmanabhan R, Finance student    | 03 29 2010 10:27:36 +0000
Rating : +3 
Thanks Vijay Bhatia sir, nice sharing. An eye opener.
There is little, if not no doubt about long term investments in stocks a country growing at 8 -9% giving a considerable return. And, again in the case ulips, much value is derived from the insurance aspect associated and are not advisable from a sole investment point of view.
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