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Why some fund houses
don’t launch FMPs?
Mumbai: Fixed
Maturity Plans have been the talk of the town in 2011. They are like a
treadmill. AMCs have to keep launching them or hit a stop button. “FMPs are
meant to keep sales guys busy,” says a CEO of a midsized fund house.
While some AMCs are ramping up
the AUM through FMPs, others are not so excited due to the wafer thin margins
in this product. It’s a volume game. Larger the assets gathered, higher the
profits.
AMCs can charge 10 to 60 basis
points as annual expense depending
upon the whether the product is targeted at retail or institutional clients. Retail
investors are charged more than institutional investors.
The expense ratio is low as FMPs
are passive products which require fewer resources and less research, unlike an
equity fund where stocks are bought and sold. However, raising bulk sums of
money especially from retail investors is not a cakewalk. Distributors are
offered a trail commission between 0.05% and 0.30% per annum, depending on the
tenure of the product.
It is also a matter of
business model for some fund houses to avoid FMPs. They prefer to deal in better
margin products like equity funds which can charge above 2% as annual expense. Also,
the money is short term in nature and the product is cyclical.
Franklin Templeton and
Quantum do not launch any FMPs. Although Franklin Templeton used to come out
with FMPs earlier, it has stopped now mainly to focus on building long term
assets. Morgan Stanley, Sahara, Peerless, ING Vysya do not have a single FMP in
their product basket. Fund houses like JM Financial, HSBC and Principal have
not been so aggressive in launching FMPs. Other fund houses like Escorts and Edelweiss
have a handful of FMPs.
“For investors to reap benefits from investment in a fixed
income scheme, timing the exit is crucial. Also, returns are affected by the
timing of the launch and the paper available for investing. In an FMP while one
is locking in interest rates, the credit risk always remains. Besides, they
(FMPs) are not very remunerative for AMCs,” says Jimmy Patel, CEO, Quantum
Mutual Fund. “
One reason why AMCs frequently come up with FMPs is to ensure that
assets are gathered in new FMPs to replace the assets going out through the
maturing FMPs. If they don’t launch new FMPs, the assets under
management dip. A majority of FMP subscribers tend to be HNIs and institutional
investors.
Currently, there are 631
FMPs in the market (considering only growth option). AMCs typically file one
offer document to launch a series of FMPs.
Despite the thin margins,
top fund houses are aggressively launching FMPs. The top 10 fund houses are
managing around Rs. 90,000 crore in FMPs.
“FMPs are launched
constantly because they compete with bank deposits which are available
perpetually. There’s a good arbitrage between bank deposit and FMP. The
benefits of low cost are passed to investors,” says Sunil Subramaniam, Director
- Sales and Marketing, Sundaram Mutual Fund.
FMPs posted an average of 9%
annualized return in the last six months, making them one of the most preferred
investment avenues, thanks to the rising interest rates and uncertainty
surrounding the markets.
AMCs are now beginning to
launch FMPs which offer double indexation benefits. While 2011 was the year of
short term FMPs, now long tenured FMPs are being launched to lock in interest
rates.
Betting
big on FMPs
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AMC
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FMP AUM
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AUM
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Percentage
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ICICI Prudential
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16,081
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69,368
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23%
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Birla Sun Life
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15,487
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60,377
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26%
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Reliance
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14,729
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82,306
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18%
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Kotak
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9,559
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29,738
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32%
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SBI
|
9,250
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41,551
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22%
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DSP BlackRock
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9,004
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30,565
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29%
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HDFC
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7,983
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88,628
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9%
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IDFC
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5,791
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26,476
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22%
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Sundaram
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2,400
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14,775
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16%
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Source: AMFI web site
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