Top Banner
1 DISSERTATION REPORT ON PERFORMANCE OF MUTUAL FUNDS IN INDIA IN THE PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE POST GRADUATE DIPLOMA IN MANAGEMENT (2006-2008) FACULTY GUIDE : STUDENT NAME Prof Anubha Gupta Gauri Shanker Tripathi ITS, Ghaziabad PGDM –IV Sem
168

Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

Apr 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

1

DISSERTATION REPORTON

PERFORMANCE OF MUTUAL FUNDSIN INDIA

IN THE PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE POST GRADUATE DIPLOMA

IN MANAGEMENT (2006-2008)

FACULTY GUIDE: STUDENT NAMEProf Anubha Gupta Gauri Shanker TripathiITS, Ghaziabad PGDM –IV Sem

Page 2: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

2

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

I take this opportunity to express my heartfelt thanks to “ INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE “ for grooming me for the past one year and making me feel confident for taking up such assignment and coming up with efficient and effective results.I am extremely thankful for all the support that I got from Mr. Anubha Gupta my mentor who gave me the vision insight and knowledge base, with there active involvement and assistance at all stages despite there busy schedule’s. Last but not least I would like to give my thanks to all my colleagues who helped me

during my research project.

Gauri Shanker Tripathi

PGDM – IV Sem.

Page 3: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

3

Certificate

Certified that Gauri Shanker Tripathi has carried out the

Dissertation work presented in this thesis entitled “Performance of

Mutual Funds in India” for the award of PGDM from Institute of

Technology and Science under my supervision. The Dissertation

embodies result of original work and studies carried out by Student

himself and the contents of the thesis do not form the basis for the

award of any other degree to the candidate or to anybody else.

(Prof Anubha Gupta)

Designation: Date:

Page 4: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

4

TABLE OF CONTENT

1. Acknowledgement

2. Abstract

3. Introduction

4. About The Project

Objective of the project

Scope of research

Research Methodology

Limitation of study

5. Mutual Fund In India

Origin of Mutual Fund

History of Mutual Fund In India

Mutual Fund

Types of Mutual Fund

Special Legal Structure of Mutual Fund

Advantage and Disadvantage of Mutual Fund

6. Legal and Regulatory Environment

Legal and Regulatory Environment of Mutual Fund

How invest in mutual fund

Measuring and Evaluating Mutual Fund Performance

7. Different Companies Profile

About ICICI Prudential

ICICI Prudential Guiding Principle

About Unit Trust Of India

Products of companies

8. Comparison of ICICI Prudential And UTI with

Other AMC’S ON Different Parameter

9. Current Scenario Of Mutual Fund In India

10. Recommendation

11. Conclusion

Page 5: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

5

12. Bibliography

ABSTRACT

The mutual fund industry in India began with the setting up of the Unit Trust In India

(UTI) in 1964 by the Government of India. During the last 36 years, UTI has grown to be

a dominant player in the industry with assets of over Rs. 76,547 Crores as of March 31,

2003. The UTI is governed by a special legislation, the Unit Trust of India Act, 1963. In

1987 public sector banks and insurance companies were permitted to set up mutual funds

and accordingly since 1987, 6 public sector banks have set up mutual funds. Also the two

Insurance companies LIC and GIC established mutual funds.  Securities Exchange Board

of India (SEBI) formulated the Mutual Fund (Regulation) 1993, which for the first time

established a comprehensive regulatory framework for the mutual fund industry.

Since then several mutual funds have been set up by the private and joint sectors..

Page 6: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

6

INTRODUCTION.Indian econonmy is hogging up. There is increasing evidence that the recent phase of higher economic growth is not so much a cyclical phenomenon as the consequence of structural change in the economy.We are now moving from Hindu rate of growth to sardar rate of growth. India’s economic growth is now second only to china. India is at 9.4% GDP growth in 2006-2007 and an Average of 8.7% in the last four years. Gross domestic savings and gross domestic investment to GDP numbers at 33.4% and 33.8% are a quant- um jump from 23.5% and 22.9%in 2001-2002. Add to that increase in F.D.I.More important, the trend of FDI trailing FII has reversed.The past three years have thus seen dramatic increase in Inflow from US$ 4.3 billion in 2003-2004 to US$ 19 billion. More importantly, all sub sectors shared in the acceleration. While manufactur- ing grew 12.3%, growth in mining and electricity generation was also higher at 5.1% and 7.4% respectively. Thus even as services continue to grow fast. It has also been predicted for India to be fifth largest consuming economy by year 2025. The Indian capital market and financial market has been increasing tremendously during last few years.The spread of banking system has been a major factor in promoting financial intermediation in the economy and in financial savings. The market looks healthy, trading in the range of 12500-13000 plus levels as recovery continues. In recent times share market is the barometer of economy. India's stock markets are on a roll. During the past year, Indian companies raised more than $6 billion in capital on the Bombay Stock Exchange, the National Stock Exchange and other regional stock exchanges. By some measures, stock price have gone up by nearly 50% in recent months.Consistent with this evolution of the financial sector,Indian economy the mutual fund industry has also come to occupy an important place.Mutual fund as an investment option, have become very attractive for retail investors who are interested in the financial markets but do not have the time, expertise and experience in good stock picking. The problem faced by small investors in share market have been offset by the emergence of mutual funds. Indian mutual fund industry is as old as four decades but its growth and awareness has reached the present level only since the last five years. It is the most suitable investment for the comman man who invests his savings at regular intervals. It is an investment tool where return on investment is high compared with the other investments which are available in the market.It is mature,well – developed, regulated investment vehicle.However ,like any other investment this, too carries a certain level of risk. An investor therefore has to take care of his/her risk taking capability, tax issues, investment period etc

Page 7: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

7

SEBI, as a regulator, issued the first set of regulations, governing the transparency operations and disclosures standard of mutual fund industry in 1993. They were revised in 1996. Though the industry has been operational for so long, it still suffers from shortcomings like lack of systematic evaluation of investor's requirements, designing products to suit their specific needs, lack of depth in the market, lack of proper process and lack of better services. Consolidation in this industry has gained momentum today but still challenges are ahead. Indian mutual fund industry is still in its very early stages of growth. Today with only 100$billion of AUMs ,the industry still is very minuscule in the context of the domestic savings in the country and the global scale. According to a economic times survey in India still prefer to do their savings in physical assets so The main challenges of this industry lie in attracting more number of retail investors and manage their interests well. Net mobilization of funds, and educating investors about different funds are the other key challenges it faces. The industry has to be innovative and competitive and the members of this industry have to strive for its development and growth and its continuous increase in numbers. The industry has also realized that managing the investor's money is risky and that it has to be very cautious in its operations.

.

Page 8: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

8

OBJECTIVE OF THE PROJECT

To know the performance of the mutual funds

To know various types of the mutual funds

To know the various advantages and disadvantages of the mutual funds

To evaluate the performance of the mutual funds

comparative study of various funds

Page 9: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

9

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Research methodology comprises defining and redefining the problem, formulating hypothesis or suggestion solutions, collecting, organizing and evaluating the data, making deductions and reaching to conclusions and at last carefully testing the conclusions and determine whether the formulated hypothesis is right or wrong.

METHODOLOGY USED

Descriptive analytical research was used for the project. In this type of research, the researcher has to use the facts and information already available and analyze these to make critical evaluation of the market. The facts or the information required to analyze the data was available in the manual published by the by company. This was the main source of the information for the project.

SOURCE OF DATA

Secondary data

SECONDARY SOURCE

Economic Timeswww. Valueresearchonline.com www.amfiindia.com Money TodaySites of different asset management companieswww.google .com

Page 10: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

10

Limitation of study :

The study might not be all perfect because of certain limitations.

The problem of time scarcity was an important want for within a short span of time , the project had to be completed, hence many informations could not be gathered nor evaluated.

Apart from time scarcity among the respondents is also faced which forced me to use short questionnaire , but I have tried my best to present an unbiased report. In spite of all carefulness there may be chance of error in it as nobody is perfct.

Though every possible care was taken to remove any bias or distortion creeping in the survey itself has quite a few practical constraints.

1. The difficulty of incomplete and biased response from the

Customers was always there to be faced and in few of the

Instances customer /respondents refused to cooperate.

2. The difficulty of money was also there as I had to go to the

Respondents in the city with my scooter.

3. Sometimes the non-response from the respondents was very

distractive.

4. Not every customer was willing to reveal the real

information and their feelings.

5. Validity of information related to some questions can not be

considered doubtless.

Page 11: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

11

ORIGIN OF MUTUALFUND

Mutual funds goes back to the times of the Egyptians and Phonenicians when they sold shares in caravans and vessels to spread the risk of these ventures. The foreign and colonial government Trust of London of 1868 is considered to be the fore-runner of the modern concept of mutual funds. The USA is, however, considered to be the mecca of modern mutual funds. By the early - 1930s quite a large number of close - ended mutual funds were in operation in the U.S.A.

HISTROY OF MUTUAL FUNDS IN INDIA

The mutual fund industry in India started in 1963 with the formation of Unit Trust of India, at the initiative of the Reserve Bank and the Government of India. The objective was to attract small investors and introduce them to market investments. Since the, the history of mutual fund in India can be broadly divided into three distinct phases.

Phase 1- 1964-1987 (Unit Trust of India)

An Act of Parliament established Unit Trust of India (UTI) on 1963. It was set up by the Reserve Bank of India and functioned under the Regulatory and administrative control of the Reserve Bank of India. In 1978 UTI was de-linked from the RBI and the Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI) took over the regulatory and administrative control in place of RBI. The first scheme launched by UTI was Unit Scheme 1964,followed by ULIP in 1971,CGGA 1986 Mastershare 1987. UTI was the only player in the market

enjoying the monopoly. At the end of 1988 UTI had Rs.6,700 crores of assets under management.It was huge mobilization on funds.

1987-1988

Amount mobilized (Rs.crores)

Asset under Management (Rs. Crores)

UTI 2,175 6700

Total 2,175 6700

Page 12: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

12

Phase 2- 1987-1993(entry of public sector )

1987 marked the entry of non- UTI, public sector mutual funds set up by public sector banks and Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) and General Insurance Corporation of India (GIC). SBI Mutual Fund was the first non- UTI Mutual Fund established in June 1987 followed by Can bank Mutual Fund (Dec 87), Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund (Aug 89), Indian Bank Mutual Fund (Nov 89), Bank of India (Jun 90), Bank of Baroda Mutual Fund (Oct 92). LIC established its mutual fund in June 1989 while GIC had set up its mutual fund in December 1990.In phase 2 also UTI was the undisputed leader.At the end of 1993, the mutual fund industry had assets under management of Rs.47, 004 crores.It was the time when mindset of the consumer changed to some extent.

Phase 3- 1993-1996(emergence of private funds)

With the entry of private sector funds in 1993, a new era started in the Indian mutual fund industry, giving the Indian investors a wider choice of fund families. Also, 1993 was the year in which the first Mutual Fund Regulations came into being, under which all mutual funds, except UTI were to be registered and governed. The erstwhile Kothari Pioneer (now merged with Franklin Templeton) was the first private sector mutual fund registered in July 1993. The 1993 SEBI (Mutual Fund) Regulations were substituted by a more comprehensive and revised Mutual Fund Regulations in 1996. The industry now functions under the SEBI (Mutual Fund) Regulations 1996. The number of mutual fund houses went on increasing, with many foreign mutual funds setting up funds in India and also the industry has witnessed several mergers and acquisitions. Indian mutual fund industry also saw many joint venture of foreign fund management companies with Indian promoters. Competition

1992-1993

Amount mobilized (Rs.crores)

Asset under Management (Rs. Crores)

UTI 11,057 38,247

Public sector 1,964 8,757

Total 13,021 47,004

Page 13: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

13

increased the investor servicing technique. Investor started becoming selective. As at the end of January 2003, there were 33 mutual funds with total assets of Rs. 1,21,805 crores.

Phase 4-1996(SEBI regulation for mutual funds)

In February 2003, following the repeal of the Unit Trust of India Act 1963 UTI was bifurcated into two separate entities. One is the Specified Undertaking of the Unit Trust of India with assets under management of Rs.29,835 crores as at the end of January 2003, representing broadly, the assets of US 64 scheme, assured return and certain other schemes. The Specified Undertaking of Unit Trust of India, functioning under an administrator and under the rules framed by Government of India and does not come under the purview of the Mutual Fund Regulations. 1999 marks the beginning of a new phase in the history of the mutual fund industry in India, a phase of significant in terms of both amounts mobilized from investor and asset under management. Consider the growth in asset as seen in the figures below:

Gross amount Mobilized (Rs. Crores)

Asset under management (Rs. Crores)

1998-99 1999-2000 1998-99 1999-2000

UTI 11,679 13,536 53,320 76,547

(77.87%) (67.75%)

Public sector 1,732 4,039 8,292 11,412

(12.11%) (10.09%)

Private sector 7,966 42,173 6,860 25,046

(10.02%) (22.16%)

Total 21,377 59,748 68,472 113,005

The size of the industry is growing rapidly, as seen by the figure of asset under management that has gone from over Rs. 113,005 crores, a growth of nearly 60%in just one year. Within the growing industry, by March 2000, the relative market shares of different players in terms of amount mobilized and assets management having undergone a change.The second is the UTI Mutual Fund Ltd, sponsored by SBI, PNB, BOB and LIC. It is registered with SEBI and functions under the Mutual Fund Regulations. With the bifurcation of the erstwhile UTI which had in March 2000 more than Rs.76,000

Page 14: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

14

crores of assets under management and with the setting up of a UTI Mutual Fund, conforming to the SEBI Mutual Fund Regulations, and with recent mergers taking place. among different private sector funds, the mutual fund industry has entered its current phase of consolidation and growth. As at the end of June 2007 there are 33 players in the mutual fund industry

MUTUAL FUND

The concept of Mutual Fund

A Mutual fund is a trust that pools the money from a number of investors and invests it in different type of securities to earn returns. The money held in the trust is divided into shares of equal value called “units”. Investors become “unit- holder” and are allotted units based on amount of their investment.

The trustees of the mutual fund trust appoint an asset management company (AMC) to manage the investment. They also appoints registrars, auditors , custodians and other service providers to support the smooth functioning of the fund The decision on how in the Invest the money in the trust are taken by AMC which is paid an investment management fee

Page 15: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

15

About mutual fund

A Mutual Fund units are investment vehicles that provides a means of participation in the stock market for people who have neither the time, nor the money, nor perhaps the expertise to undertake direct investment in equities success fully. On another level they also provide routs in to specialists markets where direct investment often demands often more time and more knowledge than an investor or his financial adviser may posess.The basic idea is simple a mutual fund is a body corporate that pools the savings of a number of investors and invests the same in a variety of different units are financial instruments, or securities. The income earned through these investments and the capital appreciations realized by the scheme are shared by its unit holders in proportion to the number of units owned by them. the price of the unit in any mutual fund is governed by the underlying securities. The price will there fore will fluctuate with movement of the market sector in which fund is invested The value of a investor holding in a unit can there fore, like an investment in shares, go down as well as up. Mutual funds can thus be considered as financial intermediaries in the investment business that collect funds from the public and invest on behalf of the investors. The losses and gains accrue to the investors only. The advantage is that the investor is taking much less of a risk than a direct equity investor, because increase in the number of stocks held obviously reduces the effect that any stock can have on over all performance of the equity portfolio .Professional management has two benefits: It provides specialist investment expertise which should ensure greater success than an inexperienced can achieve on and it reduces the administrative burden of investment The Investment objectives outlined by a Mutual Fund in its prospectus are binding on the Mutual Fund scheme. The investment objectives specify the class of securities a Mutual Fund can invest in. Mutual Funds invest in various asset classes like equity, bonds, debentures, commercial paper and government securities

Special legal structure of mutual funds

Mutual funds have a unique structure not shared with other entities such as companies of firms. It is important for the employees and agents to be aware of the special nature of this structure, because it determine the right and responsibilities of the fund’s constituents viz. sponsors, trustees, custodians, transfer agent and of course, the fund and the asset management company(AMC). The legal structure also derives the inter-relationship between these constituents.

Page 16: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

16

The structure mutual funds in India:

India has a legal framework within which mutual fund is being constituted. In India, open and close-end funds operate under the same regulatory structure, and are constituted alone one unique structure- as unit trusts. A mutual fund in India is allowed to issue open-end and closed-end schemes under a common legal structure. Therefore, a mutual fund may have several different schemes (open and closed-end) under it i.e. under one unit trust, at any point of time. The structure which is required to be followed by mutual fund in India is lead down under SEBI (Mutual Fund) regulation, 1996. In the following paragraphs, we take brief look at the structure of each fund constituents.

The fund sponsor :

“Sponsor” is defined under SEBI regulation as any person who acting alone or in combination with another body corporate establishes a mutual fund. The sponsor of a fund is akin to the promoter of a company as he gets the fund registered with SEBI. The sponsor will form a trust and appoint a board of trustees. The sponsor will also generally appoint an asset management company as fund managers. The sponsors, either other directly or acting through trustees, will also appoint a custodian to hold the fund assets. All these appointments are made in accordance with SEBI regulation. As per the existing SEBI regulation, for a person to qualify as sponsor, he must contribute at least 40% of the net worth of the AMC and posses a sound financial track record over five year prior to registration. The Sponsor is not responsible or liable for any loss or shortfall resulting from the operation of the Schemes beyond the initial contribution made by it towards setting up of the Mutual Fund.

Mutual fund as trust:

A mutual fund in India is constituted in form of the public trust created under the Indian trust act 1882.The trust deed is registered under the Indian registration act 1908.The fund sponsor acts as the settler of the trust, contributing to its initial capital and appoints a trustee to hold the asset of the trust of the benefits of the unit holders, who are the beneficiaries of the trust. The fund then invites investors to contribute their money in the

Page 17: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

17

pool, by subscribing to “units” issued by various schemes established by the trust, units being evidence of their beneficial interest in the fund. It should be understood that a mutual fund is just “a pass-trough” vehicle. Under the India trust act, the trust or the fund has no independent legal capacity itself, rather it is the trustee or trustees who have the legal capacity and all acts in relation to the trust are take on its behalf by the trustees. The trustees hold the unit holder’s money in a fiduciary capacity i.e. the money belongs to the unit holders and is entrusted to the fund for the purpose of investment in legal parlance, the investors or the unit holders are the “beneficial owners” of the investments held by the trust, even as these investments held in the name of the trustees on a day to day basis. Being public trust, mutual funds can invited any number of investor as beneficial owners in there investment schemes.

Trustees:

A board of trustees –a body of individuals, or trust company –a corporate body, may manage the trust- the mutual fund-. Boards of trustees manage most of the fund in India.The main responsibility of the trusteeis to safeguard the interest of the unit holders inter alia ensure that the Amc function in the interest of the investors and in accordance with securities board of exchange in India’s(mutual fund) regulations,1996, the provisions of the trust deeds and offer documents of the respective schemes. While the board of trustees is governed by the provisions of the Indian trust acts. it would also be required to comply with the provision of the companies act, 1956.the board of the company, as an independent body, acts as protector of the unit-holders interests. The trustees do not directly manage the portfolio of securities of this specialist functions, they appoint an asset management company. They ensure that the fund is managed by the AMC as per the defined objective and in accordance with the trust deed and SEBI regulations. The trust is created trough a document call the trust deed i.e. executed by the fund sponsor in favor of the trustees. The trust deed is required to be stamped as registered under the provisions of the Indian registration act and registered with SEBI.

Rights of trustees:

The trustees appoint the AMC with the prior approval of SEBI. They also approve each of the schemes floated by the AMC. They have the right to request any necessary information from the AMC

concerning the operation of the various schemes managed by the AMC.

Page 18: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

18

Trustees may take remedial action if they belief that the conduct of the funds business is not in accordance with SEBI regulations.

The Asset Management Company:

The role of an AMC is to act as the investment manager of the trust.The sponsors, or the trustees, if so authorized by the trust deed, appoint the AMC. The AMC so appointed is required to be approved by SEBI. Once approved, the AMCfunctions under the supervision of its own board of director, and also under the direction of the trustees and SEBI. The trustees are empowered to terminate the appointment of the AMC by majority and appoint a new AMC with the prior approval of SEBI and unit-holders.The AMC would, in the name of the trust, float and then manage the different investment “schemes” as per SEBI regulations and as per the investment management agreement it signs with the trustees. The AMC of a mutual fund must have a net worth of at least Rs. 10 crores at all times .At least 50%of the director of the AMC are independeny directors who are not associated with sponsor in any manner. Directors of the AMC, both independent and non-independent, should have adequate professional experience in financial services and should be individuals of high moral standing, a condition also applicable to other key personnel of the AMC. The AMC cannot act as a trustee of any other mutual fund. Besides its role as the fund manager, it may under take specific activities such as advisory services and financial consulting, provided these activities and run independently of one another and the AMC’s resources (such as personnel, system, etc.) are properly segregated by activity. The AMC must always act in the interest of the unit-holders and report to the trustees with respect to its activities.

Obligations of the AMC and its directors

The AMC and its directors must ensure that Investment of funds is in accordance with SEBI regulations and the trust deed. They take responsibility for the acts of its employees and others whose services it

has procured. They are answerable to the trustees and must submit quarterly reports to them on

AMC activities and compliance with SEBI regulations They do not undertake any other activity conflicting with managing the fund. They will float schemes only after obtaining the prior approval of the trustees and

SEBI

Page 19: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

19

They will make the required disclosures to the investors in areas such as calculation of NAV and repurchase price.

Independent directors and trustees:

SEBI places certain obligations on independent directors on boards of the trust and the AMC. They must pay specific attention to the investment agreement and the compensation paid under it, any service contracts with affiliates to ensure higher than markets-level fees have not been charged by the AMC to the fund, any securities transactions with affiliates if permitted, principal underwriting contracts, and any service contracts with the associates of the AMC. The board purpose of these obligations is to ensure the reasonability of all fees paid to sponsors, AMC and their associates for services provided. The independent directors/trustees must also design a code of ethics for the AMC and the trust personnel for any personal securities transactions. They must also oversee the selection of other independent director’s appointments

Registrar and Transfer agent

The AMC if so authorized by the trust deed appoints the registrar and transfer agent to the mutual fund. The registrar processes the application form, redemption reqest, dispatches the account statement to the unit holders. The registrar and transfer agent also handles communications with investors and updates investors records.

Custodian – Appointed by board of trustees for safe keeping of securities asindependent entity of sponsor.

Distributors – Are appointed by AMC and may act on behalf of different funds In merger of two AMCs, SEBI approval and consent of 75% unit holders arerequired

Independent individuals are appointed as agent

AMC takeover by another sponsorIf another sponsor takeover another AMC it is necessary to take SEBI approval.It is also mandatory to inform unit holder.

Page 20: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

20

Scheme takeover SEBI approval require Investors should be given option to redeem units incase they do not consent for it Mutual Funds incur various expenses on marketing, distribution, advertising, portfolio churning, fund manager's salary etc. Many funds recover these expenses from the investors in the form of load. These funds are known as Load Funds. A load fund may impose following types of loads on the investors:

SECTION THREE – TYPES OF FUNDS

There are wide variety of mutual fund schemes that cater to your needs.whatever your age, financial position,risk tolerance and return expectations whether as foundation of your investment programme or as supplement of your scheme.However, these different types of funds can be grouped into certain classifications. Under each broad classification, we may the distinguish between several types of mutual funds on the basis of the nature of their portfolios, meaning whether they invest in equities or fixed income securities or some other combination of both. Every type of fund has a unique risk- profile that is determined by its portfolio, for which reason funds are often separated into more or less risk- bearing. We first look at the fund classifications and then understand the various types of funds under them

(I) Closed-end or Open-end

Open-end Fund

An open-ended fund or scheme is one that is available for subscription and repurchase on a continuous basis. These schemes do not have a fixed maturity period. Investors can conveniently buy and sell units at Net Asset Value (NAV) related prices which are declared on a daily basis. The key feature of open-end schemes is liquidity.

CRISIL's composite performance ranking (CPR) measures the performance for each of the open-ended scheme of Mutual Fund. There are four parameters considered to measure the performance of a mutual fund such as Risk-adjusted returns of the scheme's NAV, Diversification of Portfolio, Liquidity and Asset Size

Page 21: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

21

Close-end Fund

A close-ended fund or scheme has a stipulated maturity period e.g. 5-7 years. The fund is open for subscription only during a specified period at the time of launch of the scheme. Investors can invest in the scheme at the time of the initial public issue and thereafter they can buy or sell the units of the scheme on the stock exchanges where the units are listed. In order to provide an exit route to the investors, some close-ended funds give an option of selling back the units to the mutual fund through periodic repurchase at NAV related prices.One of the characteristics of the close-ended schemes is that they are generally traded at a discount to NAV; but the discount narrows as maturity nears. SEBI Regulations stipulate that at least one of the two exit routes is provided to the investor i.e. either repurchase facility or through listing on stock exchanges. These mutual funds schemes disclose NAV generally on weekly basis

Interval Schemes

These funds combine the features of both open–ended and close-ended funds wherein the fund is close-ended for the first couple of years and open-ended thereafter. Some funds allow fresh subscriptions and redemption at fixed times every year (say every six months) in order to reduce the administrative aspects of daily entry or exit, yet providing reasonable liquidity

Load Funds No Load Funds

LoadFunds

Mutual Funds incur various expenses on marketing, distribution, advertising, portfolio churning, fund manager's salary etc. Many funds recover these expenses from the investors in the form of load. These funds are known as Load Funds. A load fund may impose following types of loads on the investors:

Page 22: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

22

Entry Load - Also known as Front-end load, it refers to the load charged to an investor at the time of his entry into a scheme. Entry load is deducted from the investor's contribution amount to the fund.

Exit Load - Also known as Back-end load, these charges are imposed on an investor when he redeems his units (exits from the scheme). Exit load is deducted from the redemption proceeds to an outgoing investor.

Deferred Load - Deferred load is charged to the scheme over a period of time.

Contingent Deferred Sales Charge (CDSS) - In some schemes, the percentage of exit load reduces as the investor stays longer with the fund. This type of load is known as Contingent Deferred Sales Charge. In India,SEBI has defined a “load” as the one-timefee payable by the investor to allow the fund to meet initial issue expenses including brokers’/agents’/distributors’ commissions, advertising and marketing expenses. A load fund’s declared NAV does not include load charges

No-loadFunds All those funds that do not charge any of the above mentioned loads are known as No-load Funds.

Tax-exemptFunds

Funds that invest in securities free from tax are known as Tax-exempt Funds. In India, after the 1999 Union Government Budget, all of the dividend income received from any of the mutual funds is tax-free in the hands of the investors. All open-end equity oriented funds are exempt from distribution tax (tax for distributing income to investors). Long term capital gains and dividend income in the hands of investors are tax-free.These funds offer tax benefits to investors under the Income Tax Act. Opportunities provided under this scheme are in the form of tax rebates U/s 80C as well saving in Capital Gains U/s 54EA and 54EB. Tax benefits on investment of up to 1 lakh ten thousand in specified instruments U/s 80C. Further, there are no internal caps specified for individual instruments under sec 80 C (except the 70,000 limit for PPF investments). They are best suited for investors seeking tax concessions

Non-Tax-exemptFunds

Funds that invest in taxable securities are known as Non-Tax- exempt Funds. In India, all funds, except open-end equity oriented funds are liable to pay tax on distribution income. Profits arising out of sale of units by an investor within 12 months of purchase are categorized as short-term capital gains, which are taxable. Sale of

Page 23: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

23

Schemes according to Investment Objective:

A scheme can also be classified as growth scheme, income scheme, or balanced scheme considering its investment objective. Such schemes may be open-ended or close-ended schemes as described earlier. Such schemes may be classified mainly as follows:

Equity FundsEquity funds are considered to be the more risky funds as compared to other fund types, but they also provide higher returns than other funds. It is advisable that an investor looking to invest in an equity fund should invest for long term i.e. for 3 years or more. There are different types of equity funds each falling into different risk bracket. In the order of decreasing risk level, there are following types of equity fundunits of an equity oriented fund is subject to Securities Transaction Tax (STT). STT is deducted from the redemption proceeds to an investor

a. Aggressive Growth Funds - In Aggressive Growth Funds, fund managers

aspire for maximum capital appreciation and invest in less researched shares of speculative nature. Because of these speculative investments Aggressive Growth Funds become more volatile and thus, are prone to higher risk than other equity funds.

b. Growth Funds - Growth Funds also invest for capital appreciation (with time

horizon of 3 to 5 years) but they are different from Aggressive Growth Funds in the sense that they invest in companies that are expected to outperform the market in the future. Without entirely adopting speculative strategies, Growth Funds invest in those companies that are expected to post above average earnings in the future

C. specialty Funds - Specialty Funds have stated criteria for investments and their

portfolio comprises of only those companies that meet their criteria. Criteria for some specialty funds could be to invest/not to invest in particular regions/companies. Specialty funds are concentrated and thus, are comparatively riskier than diversified funds.. There are following types of specialty funds:

Page 24: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

24

i. Sector Funds: Equity funds that invest in a particular sector/industry of the market are known as Sector Funds. The exposure of these funds is limited to a particular sector (say Information Technology, Auto, Banking, Pharmaceuticals or Fast Moving Consumer Goods) which is why they are more risky than equity funds that invest in multiple sectors.

ii. Foreign Securities Funds : Foreign Securities Equity Funds have the option to invest in one or more foreign companies. Foreign securities funds achieve international diversification and hence they are less risky than sector funds. However, foreign securities funds are exposed to foreign exchange rate risk and country risk.

iii. Mid-Cap or Small-Cap Funds : Funds that invest in companies having lower market capitalization than large capitalization companies are called Mid-Cap or Small-Cap Funds. Market capitalization of Mid-Cap companies is less than that of big, blue chip companies (less than Rs. 2500 crores but more than Rs. 500 crores) and Small-Cap companies have market capitalization of less than Rs. 500 crores. Market Capitalization of a company can be calculated by multiplying the market price of the company's share by the total number of its outstanding shares in the market. The shares of Mid-Cap or Small-Cap Companies are not as liquid as of Large-Cap Companies which gives rise to volatility in shareprices of these companies and consequently investment gets risky .

iv. Option Income Funds *: While not yet available in India, Option Income Funds write options on a large fraction of their portfolio. Proper use of options can help to reduce volatility, which is otherwise considered as a risky instrument. These funds invest in big, high dividend yielding companies, and then sell options against their stock positions, which generate stable income for investors.

d .Diversified Equity Funds - Except for a small portion of investment in liquid

money market, diversified equity funds invest mainly in equities without any concentration on a particular sector(s). These funds are well diversified and reduce sector-specific or company-specific risk. However, like all other funds diversified equity funds too are exposed to equity market risk. One prominent type of diversified equity fund in India is Equity Linked Savings Schemes (ELSS). As per the mandate, a minimum of 90% of investments by ELSS should be in equities at all times. ELSS investors are eligible to claim deduction from taxable income (up to Rs 1 lakh) at the time of filing the income tax return. ELSS usually has a lock-in

Page 25: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

25

period and in case of any redemption by the investor before the expiry of the lock-in period makes him liable to pay income tax on such income(s) for which he may have received any tax exemption(s) in the past.

Equity Index Funds - Equity Index Funds have the objective to match the performance of a specific stock market index. The portfolio of these funds comprises of the same companies that form the index and is constituted in the same proportion as the index. –

Equity index funds that follow broad indices (like S&P CNX Nifty, Sensex) are less risky than equity index funds that follow narrow sectoral indices (like BSEBANKEX or CNX Bank Index etc). Narrow indices are less diversified and therefore, are more risky Index fund schemes are ideal for investors who are satisfied with a return approximately equal to that of an index.

e .Value Fund s. Value Funds invest in those companies that have sound

fundamentals fundamentals and whose share prices are currently under-valued. The portfolio of these funds comprises of shares that are trading at a low Price to Earning Ratio (Market Price per Share / Earning per Share) and a low Market to Book Value (Fundamental Value) Ratio. Value Funds may select companies from diversified sectors and are exposed to lower risk level as compared to growth funds or specialty funds. Value stocks are generally from cyclical industries (such as cement, steel, sugar etc.) which make them volatile in the short-term. Therefore, it is advisable to invest in Value funds with a long-term time horizon as risk in the long term, to a large extent, is reduced

f. Equity Income or Dividend Yield Funds

The objective of Equity Income or Dividend Yield Equity Funds is to generate high recurring income and steady capital appreciation for investors by investing in those companies which issue high dividends (such as Power or Utility companies whose share prices fluctuate comparatively lesser than other companies' share prices). Equity Income or Dividend Yield Equity Funds are generally exposed to the lowest risk level as compared to other equity funds.

Page 26: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

26

2. Debt / Income Funds

Funds that invest in medium to long-term debt instruments issued by private companies, banks, financial institutions, governments and other entities belonging to various sectors (like infrastructure companies etc.) are known as Debt / Income Funds. Debt funds are low risk profile funds that seek to generate fixed current income (and not capital appreciation) to investors. In order to ensure regular income to investors, debt (or income) funds distribute large fraction of their surplus to investors. Although debt securities are generally less risky than equities, they are subject to credit risk (risk of default) by the issuer at the time of interest or principal payment. To minimize the risk of default, debt funds usually invest in securities from issuers who are rated by credit rating agencies and are considered to be of "Investment Grade". Debt funds that target high returns are more risky. Based on different investment objectives, there can be following types of debt funds

a. Diversified Debt Funds - Debt funds that invest in all securities issued by entities

belonging to all sectors of the market are known as diversified debt funds. The best feature of diversified debt funds is that investments are properly diversified into all sectors which results in risk reduction. Any loss incurred, on account of default by a debt issuer, is shared by all investors which further reduces risk for an individual investor.

B Focused Debt Funds* - Unlike diversified debt funds, focused debt funds are narrow

focus funds that are confined to investments in selective debt securities, issued by companies of a specific sector or industry or origin. Some examples of focused debt funds are sector, specialized and offshore debt funds, funds that invest only in Tax Free Infrastructure or Municipal Bonds. Because of their narrow orientation, focused debt funds are more risky as compared to diversified debt funds. Although not yet available in India these funds are conceivable and may be offered to investors very soon.

C High Yield Debt funds - As we now understand that risk of default is present in

all debt funds, and therefore, debt funds generally try to minimize the risk of default by investing in securities issued by only those borrowers who are considered to be of "investment grade". But, High Yield Debt Funds adopt a different strategy and prefer securities issued by those issuers who are considered to be of "below investment grade". The motive behind adopting this sort of risky strategy is to earn higher interest returns from these issuers. These funds are more volatile and bear higher default risk, although they may earn at times higher returns for investors.

Page 27: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

27

D Assured Return Funds - Although it is not necessary that a fund will meet its

objectives or provide assured returns to investors, but there can be funds that come with a lock-in period and offer assurance of annual returns to investors during the lock-in period. Any shortfall in returns is suffered by the sponsors or the Asset Management Companies (AMCs). These funds are generally debt funds and provide investors with a low-risk investment opportunity. However, the security of investments depends upon the net worth of the guarantor (whose name is specified in advance on the offer document). To safeguard the interests of investors, SEBI permits only those funds to offer assured return schemes whose sponsors have adequate net-worth to guarantee returns in the future. In the past, UTI had offered assured return schemes (i.e. Monthly Income Plans of UTI) that assured specified returns to investors in the future. UTI was not able to fulfill its promises and faced large shortfalls in returns. Eventually, government had to intervene and took over UTI's payment obligations on itself. Currently, no AMC in India offers assured return schemes to investors, though possible.

E Fixed Term Plan Series - Fixed Term Plan Series usually are closed-end schemes

having short term maturity period (of less than one year) that offer a series of plans and issue units to investors at regular intervals. Unlike closed-end funds, fixed term plans are not listed on the exchanges. Fixed term plan series usually invest in debt / income schemes and target short-term investors. The objective of fixed term plan schemes is to gratify investors by generating some expected returns in a short period

t3.GiltFunds

Also known as Government Securities in India, Gilt Funds invest in government papers (named dated securities) having medium to long term maturity period. Issued by the Government of India, these investments have little credit risk (risk of default) and provide safety of principal to the investors. However, like all debt funds, gilt funds too are exposed to interest rate risk. Interest rates and prices of debt securities are inversely related and any change in the interest rates results in a change in the NAV of debt/gilt fundIn an opposite direction

4. MoneyMarkeLiquidFundsMoney market / liquid funds invest in short-term (maturing within one year) interest bearing debt instruments. These securities are highly liquid and provide safety of

Page 28: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

28

investment, thus making money market / liquid funds the safest investment option when compared with other mutual fund types. However, even money market / liquid funds areexposed to the interest rate risk. The typical investment options for liquid funds include Treasury Bills (issued by governments), Commercial papers (issued by companies) and Certificates of Deposit (issued by banks period.

5. HybridFunds

As the name suggests, hybrid funds are those funds whose portfolio includes a blend of equities, debts and money market securities. Hybrid funds have an equal proportion of debt and equity in their portfolio. There are following types of hybrid funds in India

Balanced Funds –

The portfolio of balanced funds include assets like debt securities, convertible securities, and equity and preference shares held in a relatively equal proportion. The objectives of balanced funds are to reward investors with a regular income, moderate capital appreciation and at the same time minimizing the risk of capital erosion. Balanced funds are appropriate for conservative investors having a long term investment horizon.

(a) Growth-and-Income Funds –

Funds that combine features of growth funds and income funds are known asGrowth-and-Income Funds. These funds invest in companies having potential for capital appreciation and those known for issuing high dividends. The level of risks involved in these funds is lower than growth funds and higher than income funds.

(b) Asset Allocation Funds – Mutual funds may invest in financial assets like equity, debt, money market or non-financial (physical) assets like real estate, commodities etc.. Asset allocation funds adopt a variable asset allocation strategy that allows fund managers to switch over from one asset class to another at any time depending upon their outlook for specific markets. In other words, fund managers may switch over to equity if they expect equity market to provide good returns and switch over to debt if they expect debt market to provide better returns. It should be noted that switching over from one asset class to another is a decision taken by the fund manager on the basis of his own judgment and understanding of specific markets, and therefore, the success of these funds depends upon the skill of a fund manager in anticipating market trends

Page 29: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

29

.

6. Commodity Funds

Those funds that focus on investing in different commodities (like metals, food grains, crude oil etc.) or commodity companies or commodity futures contracts are termed as Commodity Funds. A commodity fund that invests in a single commodity or a group of commodities is a specialized commodity fund and a commodity fund that invests in all available commodities is a diversified commodity fund and bears less risk than a specialized commodity fund. "Precious Metals Fund" and Gold Funds (that invest in gold, gold futures or shares of gold mines) are common examples of commodity funds.

7. RealestateFund Funds that invest directly in real estate or lend to real estate developers or invest in shares/securitized assets of housing finance companies, are known as Specialized Real Estate Funds. The objective of these funds may be to generate regular income for investors or capital appreciation.

8. Exchange Traded Funds (ETF) Exchange Traded Funds provide investors with combined benefits of a closed-end and an open-end mutual fund. Exchange Traded Funds follow stock market indices and are traded on stock exchanges like a single stock at index linked prices. The biggest advantage offered by these funds is that they offer diversification, flexibility of holding a single share(tradaleat index linked prices)at the sametimeRecently introduced India,these funds are quite popular abroad.

9.FundofFunds

Mutual funds that do not invest in financial or physical assets, but do invest in other mutual fund schemes offered by different AMCs, are known as Fund of Funds. Fund of Funds maintain a portfolio comprising of units of other mutual fund schemes, just like conventional mutual funds maintain a portfolio comprising of equity/debt/money market

Page 30: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

30

instruments or non financial assets. Fund of Funds provide investors with an added advantage of diversifying into different mutual fund schemes with even a small amount of investment, which further helps in diversification of risks. However, the expenses of Fund of Funds are quite high on account of compounding expenses of investments into different mutual fund scheme

Different plans that mutual funds offer

Growth plan and dividend plan

A growth is a plan under a scheme where in the returns from investments are reinvested and very few income distributions, if any, are made. The investor thus only realizes capital appreciation on the investment. This plan appeals to investor in high income bracket. Under the dividend plan, income is distributed time to time. This plan is ideal to those investors requiring regular income

Dividend reinvestment planDividend plans of schemes carry an additional option for reinvestment of income distribution. This referred to as the dividend reinvestment plan. Under this plan, dividends declared by a find are reinvested on behalf of the investor, thus increasing the number of units held by investors.

Automatic investment planUnder the automatic investment plan (AIP) also called systematic investment plan (SIP), the investor is given the option for investing in a specific frequency of months in a specified schemeofthe Mutual Fund for a constant sum of investment. Automatic investment plan allows the investor to plan their there savings through a structured regular monthly saving plan.When market is volatile systematic investment plan is a right option to invest money. Market fluctuations becomes an opportunity to maximize your wealth. That plan attract those investor who invest their money bin a recurring deposit.

Automatic withdrawal planUnder the automatic withdrawal plan (AWP) also called systematic withdrawal plan (SWP), a facility is provided to the investor to withdraw a pre-determined amount from his fund at a pre-determined interval.

Players in the mutual fund Industry

Page 31: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

31

(A) Bank Sponsored

1. Joint Ventures - Predominantly Indian

a. SBI Funds Management Private Limited

2. Others

a. BOB Asset Management Company Limited b. Canbank Investment Management Services Ltd. c. UTI Asset Management Company (Pvt.) Ltd

(B)Institutions

a. LIC Mutual Fund Asset Management Company Limited

(C )Private Sector

1. Indian

a. Benchmark Asset Management Company Pvt. Ltd. b. DBS Cholamandalam Asset Management Ltd. c. Escorts Asset Management Limited d. JM Financial Asset Management Private Limited e. Kotak Mahindra Asset Management Company

Limited(KMAMCL) f. Quantum Asset Management Co. Private Ltd. g. Reliance Capital Asset Management Ltd. h. Sahara Asset Management Company Private Limited i. Tata Asset Management Limited j. Taurus Asset Management Company Limited

Page 32: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

32

2. Foreign

a. AIG Global Asset Management Company (India) Pvt. Ltd. b. Franklin Templeton Asset Management (India) Private Limited

3. Joint Ventures - Predominantly Indian

a. Birla Sun Life Asset Management Company Limited b. DSP Merrill Lynch Fund Managers Limited

HDFC Asset Management Company Limitedc. ICICI Prudential Asset Mgmt.Company Limited d. Sundaram BNP Paribas Asset Management Company Limited

4. Joint Ventures - Predominantly Foreign

a. ABN AMRO Asset Management (India) Ltd. b. Deutsche Asset Management (India) Pvt. Ltd. c. Fidelity Fund Management Private Limited d. HSBC Asset Management (India) Private Ltd. e. ING Investment Management (India) Pvt. Ltd. f. JPMorgan Asset Management India Pvt. Ltd. g. Lotus India Asset Management Co. Private Ltd. h. Morgan Stanley Investment Management Pvt.Ltd. i. Principal Pnb Asset Management Co. Pvt. Ltd. j. Standard Chartered Asset Management Company Private Limited

Page 33: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

33

Advantage Of Mutual Fund

1 Portfolio Diversification

Mutual Funds invest in a number of companies across a broad cross-section ofindustries and sectors. This diversification reduces the risk because seldom do all stocks decline at the same time and in the same proportion. You achieve this diversification through a Mutual Fund with far less money than you can do on your own..

2 Professional Management

You avail of the services of experienced and skilled professionals who are backed by a dedicated investment researchteam which analyses the performance and prospects of companies and selects suitable investments to achieve the objectives of the scheme

4 Less Risk Investors acquire a diversified portfolio of securities even with a small investment in a Mutual Fund. The risk in a diversified portfolio is lesser than investing in merely 2 or 3 securities.

5 Low Transaction Costs

Due to the economies of scale (benefits of larger volumes), mutual funds pay lesser transaction costs. These benefits are passed on to the investors. Mutual Funds are a relatively less expensive way to invest compared to directly investing in the capital markets because the benefitsof scale in brokerage, custodial and other fees translate into lower costs for investors.

6 Liquidity An investor may not be able to sell some of the shares held by him very easily and quickly, whereas units of a mutual fund are far more liquid. In open-ended schemes, you can get your money back promptly at net asset value related prices from the Mutual Fund itself. With close-ended schemes, you can sell your units on a stock exchange at the prevailing market price or avail of the facility of direct repurchase at NAV related prices which some close-ended and interval schemes offer you periodically. '

7 Choice of Schemes

Mutual funds provide investors with various schemes with different investment objectives. Investors have the option of investing in a scheme having a correlation between its investment objectives and their own financial goals. These

Page 34: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

34

schemes further have different plans/options

8 Transparency You get regular information on thevalue of your investment in addition to disclosureon the specific investments made by your scheme,the proportion invested in each class of assets andthe fund manager's investment strategy and outlook.

9 Flexibility Investors also benefit from the convenience and flexibility offered by Mutual Funds. Investors can switch their holdings from a debt scheme to an equity scheme and vice-versa. Option of systematic (at regular intervals) investment and withdrawal is also offered to the investors in most open-end schemes

10 Safety Mutual Fund industry is part of a well-regulated investment environment where the interests of the investors are protected by the regulator. All funds are registered with SEBI and complete transparency is forced

11 Convenient Administration

Investing in a Mutual Fund reduces paperwork and helps you avoid many problems such as bad deliveries, delayed payments and unnecessary follow up with brokers and companies. Mutual Funds save your time and make investing easy and convenient.

12 Return Potential Over a medium to long-term, Mutual Funds have the potential to provide a higher return as they invest in a diversified basket of selected securities

DISADVANTAGE OF MUTUALFUND

Costs Control Not in the Hands of an Investor

Investor has to pay investment management fees and fund distribution costs as a percentage of the value of his investments (as long as he holds the units), irrespective of the performance of the fund

No Customized Portfolios

The portfolio of securities in which a fund invests is a decision taken by the fund manager. Investors have no right to interfere in the decision making process of a fund manager, which some investors find as a constraint in achieving their financial objectives.

Difficulty in Selecting a Suitable Fund Scheme

Many investors find it difficult to select one option from the plethora of funds/schemes/plans available. For this, they may have to take advice from financial planners in order to invest in the right fund to achieve their objectives

Page 35: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

35

LEGAL AND REGULATORY ENVIRONMENTSECTION A : REGULATORS IN INDIA

SEBI - The capital markets regulators also regulates the mutual funds inIndia. SEBI requires all mutual funds to be registered with them. SEBI issues guidelines for all mutual funds operations - investment, accounts, expenses etc.

RBI as supervisor of banks owned mutual funds - As banks in India came under the regulatory jurisdiction of RBI, bank owned funds to be under supervision of RBI and SEBI.

RBI as supervisor of Money Market Mutual Funds - RBI has supervisory responsibility over all entities that operate in the money markets. Hence in the past Money Market Mutual Funds scheme of Mutual funds had to be abide by policies laid down by RBI. Recently, it has been decided that Money Market Mutual Funds of registered mutual funds will be regulated by SEBI through SEBI (Mutual Fund) Regulations 1996.

Ministry of Finance - (MoF) ultimately supervises both the RBI & the SEBI and plays the role of apex authority for any major disputes over SEBI guidelines.

Company Law Board - Dept of Company Affairs - Registrar of companies AMCs of Mutual funds are companies registered under the companies Act1956 and therefore answerable to regulatory authorities empowered by the Companies Act.

Stock Exchanges Stock Exchanges are self-regulatory organizations supervised by SEBI. Many of closed ended funds of AMCs are listed as stock exchanges and are traded like shares

Office of the Public Trustee Mutual fund being public trust are governed by the Indian Trust Act 1882.The Board of trustees or the Trustee Company is accountable to the office of the public trustee, which in turn reports to the Charity commissioner

Unit Trust of India Unit Trust of India formed under UTI Act 1963.The Management of the Trustis under a Board of trustees, which has names of RBI, IDBI, LIC, SBI with thechairman appointed by the Government of India in consultation with theIDB

Page 36: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

36

Self-Regulatory organizations?A Self Regulatory organization (SRO) is an association representing a groupof market participants, which is empowered by the apex regulatory authority exercise pre-defined authority over regulation of their members. For example stock exchanges..However everybody representing a groupof market participants does notautomatically become a SRO. Association of Mutual funds of India (AMFI )AMFI is not a SRO. It has been formed in 1995 with the objective ofrepresenting the Mutual fund industry collectively with a view- To promote the interests of Mutual Funds and Unit holders.- To set ethical, commercial and professional standards in the industry.- To increase public awareness of Mutual funds in the country

INVESTORS RIGHT AND OBLIGATIONS

Right of “Proportionate Beneficial Ownership” Right of timely services

Unit holders entitled to receive dividend warrants within 30 days of date of declaration Unit holders have right to payment of interest at 15% p.a. in the event of failure on the part of Mutual fund to dispatch redemption proceeds within ten working days. The Unit holders can claim unclaimed redemption proceeds or dividends due within a period of 3 years of the due date at the prevailing NAV. After 3years he/she will be paid at NAV applicable at the end of the third year. For initial offers unit holders have right to expect allotment of units within 30 days from the closure of mutual offer period. Right to information Right to approve changes in fundamental attributes of the scheme. Right to wind up a scheme if 75% of investors pass a resolution to that effect. Right to terminate AMC if 75% of the unit holders decides so, of course with the prior approval of the SEBI

Page 37: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

37

Legal Limitation to Investors Rights

Unit Holders are not distinct from the Trust and there fore can not sue the Trust. Sponsors of a Mutual fund do not have any legal obligation to meet the shortfall in case the assured return is not achieved. But if the offer document has specifically provided such guarantee by a named sponsor, the investors will have the right to sue the sponsors to make good any shortfall from his returns. A Prospective investors does not enjoy any right with respect to the fund AMC or any other constituent Investor Complaints Redressal Mechanism. SEBI entertains receipt of complaints against Mutual Funds and intervenes with Fund Management to help investor resolve his complaints. SEBI help the investors in the new scheme by requiring the sponsor to appoint acompliance officer who certified that all relevant SEBI and other regulations have been complied with by the fund manager and sponsors.

Investors are neither shareholders in the AMC nor depositors. Hence their investments cannot be protected by any of these companies act regulators

OFFER DOCUMENT (OD)

Offer document describes a product, and is the most important source of information for prospective investors. AMC or the sponsor issues it. This (OD) is the primary vehicle for the investment decision. It is a legal document that protects and governs the right of an investor. Key information memorandum (KIM) is the abridged version of offer document. Application forms are issued along with the KIM. SEBI has designed standard format for issue of OD and KIM. Offer document and the KIM is valid for two years. ODs are to be updated, revised and printed once in every two years. Changes made in between these two years are circulated among investors inform of addendum or some other source of communication to investors.

Page 38: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

38

Changes made in the OD has to be filed with SEBI and should be made available at service centers and in the offices of distributors/brokers.

Offer documents should contain

- Summary information at the cover page containing name, type of the scheme, name of AMC and the mutual fund, opening and closing date of the offer, price of units, highlights of the scheme and most importantly disclaimer clause by SEBI.- A glossary of defined terms used in the offer document.- Risk factors – standard and scheme specific- Due diligence certificate to be signed by CompliancOfficer/CEO/ManagingDirector/Whole Time Director The above points should be in the same sequence. Offer document contains fundamental attributes of the scheme –- Type of the scheme- Investment objectivea) Investment patternb) Investment policies- Load and expenses Offer related information – all practical information needed by investor and agents to make the entrustment in the proposed scheme. Condensed financial information for scheme launched during three fiscal years. Constitution of the mutual fund. About objective of the fund. Activities of the sponsor. Name and addresses of the Board of Trustees/Directors Management of the fund Associate Transactions and borrowing policies- In case, scheme has invested more than 25% of its net assets in group companies.a) Business given to associate brokers should be in the limit of 5%of sale and purchase made. NAV determination, valuation and accounting policies. Procedure for repurchases. Tax treatment of investments made in the scheme. Investors’ rights and services under the scheme.- Access to information on NAV computation and unit price.-

Page 39: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

39

Investors friendly services provided by the scheme and documents available for inspection by the investors. Brief description of investor complaint history for the last three years of existing schemes and their redressal mechanism

Any penalties pending litigation or proceedings should be mentioned in the OD to alert the investors.

MEASURING AND EVALUATING MUTUAL FUNDPERFORMANCE

NET ASSET VALUE

The most important financial indicator in case of mutual funds is net asset value (NAV). A mutual fund has assets consisting of various securities & it is easy to find the market value of all the securities held by the mutual fund at the end of each business day. The number of shares held by the mutual fund multiplies the closing price of the shares at the end of the day. After adding up there figures, the liabilities are subtracted. The resultant figures are divided by the outstanding units of the mutual fund.

In simple words “NAV or Net Asset Value of the fund is the cumulative market value of the asset of the fund net of its liabilities. NAV per unit is simply the net value of assets divided by the number units outstanding. Buying and selling into funds is done on the basis of NAV- related prices.” The NAV of a Mutual of mutual fund is basically the per unit at any given moment of time &is calculated as follow.

NAV= Market value of the fund’s investments + receivables + Accrued income-liabilities -Accrued Expenses /Number of Outstanding Units

DECLARATION OF NAV

The NAV of a scheme has to be declared at least once a week. However many Mutual Fund declare NAV for their scheme on a daily basis. As per SEBI Regulation, the NAV of the scheme shall be calculated and published at least in two daily newspapers at intervals not exceeding one week. However, NAV of a close-ended scheme targeted to a

Page 40: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

40

specific segment of any monthly income scheme (which is not mandatory required to be listed on stock exchange) may be published at monthly or quarterly intervals.

Different performance measures:

Change in NAV =NAV at the end of the period – NAV at the beginning of the period- Very simple method.- However does not give the correct picture, in case the fund hasdistributed dividend. Total Return = (Dividend distributions + change in NAV *) 100 Beginning NAV

- Corrects the shortcoming of the first method by taking into account the dividend distributed.- Suitable for all types of funds. Performance must be interpreted in the light of market conditions and investment objective.- However, it ignores the fact that distributed dividend also getreinvested.

ROI = (Units held+( Div )/End NAV)-beginning NAV) Ex div NAV Beginning NAV

- Most suitable method.- Overcomes the limitation of second method by considering thereinvestment of dividend.

Expense Ratio- Total expense/average net assets of the fund.- is an indicator of the funds efficiency and cost effectiveness.

Income RatioNet Investment Income

Page 41: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

41

Net Assets

Portfolio Turnover Ratio - It measures the amount of buying and selling done by a fund. It gives an idea of how fast the fund manager is churning his portfolio.- High turnover ratio also indicates high transaction costs.30- Transaction Costs include all expenses related to trading such as

brokerage commission paid, stamp duty on transfer registrar fees andcustodians fees. It has significant bearing an fund performance.

Fund Size Small funds- Easy to manage- Achieve objective in focused manner with limited holding.Large Funds- Economics of scale- Lower Expense Ratio Cash Holdings- Enables meeting redemption needs- A cushion against decline in market prices of shares/bonds- May reduce the return on the portfolio Borrowing by mutual funds- In India, fund cannot borrow to increase fund size- As per SEBI regulation,· Mutual Funds can borrow “only” to meet temporary liquidity· Cannot borrow for a period more than 6 months· Can borrow upto 20 % of its NET ASSETS.Section B: EVALUATING FUND PERFORMANCE Basis of choosing an Appropriate Performance Benchmark:- The asset class if invests in,- An equity fund should be judged against another equity fund & equity benchmark (Indices).- The funds stated objectiveEquity FundsIndex Fund – An Index fund invests in the stock comprising of the index in the same ratio.For example,

Page 42: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

42

Market Index Fund - BSE SensexNifty Index Fund - NIFTY This is a passive management style.The difference between the return of this fund, and its index benchmark can be explained by “TRACKING ERROR”.Active Equity Funds : The fund manager actively manages this fund. To evaluate performance in such case we have to select an appropriate benchmark.Large diversified equity fund - BSE 100Sector fund - Sectoral IndicesDebt Funds :

Debt fund can also be judged against a debt market index e.g. I-BEX

Close ended debt funds can be measured against bank fixed deposits ofcomparable maturity.Money Market :: Money market have portfolio of short term instruments. The general practiceis to benchmark it against short term bank deposits.Criteria for peer group comparisons to be considered The investment objectives and risk profiles Expense ratioEven when two funds with similar characteristics are otherwise comparable,their returns must be calculated on a comparable basis. Hence,1. Compare returns of two funds over the same periods only;2. Similarly, only average annualized compound returns are comparable3. Only after-tax returns of two different schemes should be compared

Page 43: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

43

HOW TO INVEST IN MUTUAL FUNDS?Step One - Identify your investment needs.Your financial goals will vary, based on your age, lifestyle, financial independence, family commitments, level of income and expenses among many other factors. Therefore, the first step is to assess your needs. Begin by asking yourself these questions:

1. What are my investment objectives and needs? Probable Answers: I need regular income or need to buy a home or finance a wedding or educate my children or a combination of all these needs.

2. How much risk I am willing to take? Probable Answers: I can only take a minimum amount of risk or I am willing to accept the fact that my investment value may fluctuate or that there may be a short-term loss in order to achieve a long-term potential gain.

3. What are my cash flow requirements? Probable Answers: I need a regular cash flow or I need a lumpsum amount to meet a specific need after a certain period or I don't require a current cash flow but I want to build my assets for the future.

By going through such an exercise, you will know what you want out of your investment and can set the foundation for a sound Mutual Fund investment strategy.

Step Two - Choose the right Mutual Fund.

Once you have a clear strategy in mind, you have to choose which Mutual Fund and scheme you want to invest in. The offer document of the scheme tells you its objectives and provides supplementary details like the track record of other schemes managed by the same Fund Manager. Some factors to evaluate before choosing a particular Mutual Fund are:

The track record of performance over the last few years in relation to the appropriate yardstick and similar funds in the same category.

How well the Mutual Fund is organised to provide efficient, prompt and personalised service.

Degree of transparency as reflected in frequency and quality of their

communications.

Page 44: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

44

Step Three - Select the ideal mix of Schemes.. Investing in just one Mutual Fund scheme may not meet all your investment needs. You may consider investing in a combination of schemes to achieve your specific goals. The following tables could prove useful in selecting a combination of schemes that satisfy your needs.

AGGRESSIVE PLAN

Money Market Schemes 5 %Income Schemes 10-15%Balanced Schemes 10-20 %Growth Schemes 60-70 %

MODERATE PLAN

Money Market Schemes 10 %Income Schemes 20 %Balanced Schemes 40-50 %Growth Schemes 30-40 %

CONSERVATIVE PLAN

Money Market Schemes 10 %Income Schemes 50-60 %Balanced Schemes 20-30 %Growth Schemes 10 %

Selecting the right mutual fund (Bogle approach)

o 1 step : classify all equity schemes (growth, value equity income)o 2 step: choose one of two strategies. Select mainstream growth or value funds, providing broad diversification, or select either adifferentiated growth or value fund or a specialty fund whose risksand returns will vary from the overall market

3 step: Evaluate past returns of available funds (see past returnshistory)

o 4 step: Review the salient features of a scheme (see Fund size, Fund age, portfolio managers experience in managing these type offunds, cost of investments like load (entry/exit). Also see cashposition in the fund, portfolio concentration/Diversification,

Page 45: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

45

market capital of fund, portfolio turnover, If beta of 1 means then fund value will fluctuate exactly with index value.With less than 1 beta means less return in rising market but less loss infalling market & more than 1 beta means fund is giving more return in rising market & giving more loss in declining market. Selecting Debt/Bond/Income Fund:Step 1: Narrow down the choice keeping the various debt instruments in mindStep 2: Know your investor objective as per investor’s ageProfile/income/mindset towards risk etc.Step 3: See fund size, its age, relative yield, expense ratio, credit ratings,composition, Average maturity, Tax implications, past return history, Selecting money market fund:Following points should be consideredo cost of the fund (go for lower expense ratio)o quality of portfolio, (look at the credit quality of the instruments)o yields (net) Selecting a balanced mutual fund:

Following points should be consideredo portfolio balance (exact weightage)o debt portfolio character (quality)o cost of fundo returnso other portfolio statistics.

Step Four - Invest regularlyFor most of us, the approach that works best is to invest a fixed amount at specific intervals, say every month. By investing a fixed sum every month, you buy fewer units when the price is higher and more units when the price is low, thus bringing down your average cost per unit. This is called rupee cost averaging and is a disciplined investment strategy followed by investors all over the world. With many open-ended schemes offering systematic investment plans, this regular investing habit is made easy for you.

Page 46: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

46

Step Five - Keep your taxes in mindIf you are in a high tax bracket and have utilised fully the exemptions under section 80L of the Income Tax Act, investing in growth funds that do not pay dividends might be more tax efficient and improve your post-tax return.If you are in a low tax bracket and have not utilised fully the exemptions available under Section 80L of the Income Tax Act, selecting funds paying regular income could be more tax efficient. Further, there are other benefits available for investment in Mutual Funds under the provisions of the prevailing tax laws.You may therefore, consult your tax advisor or Chartered Accountant for specific advice.

Step Six - Start earlyIt is desirable to start investing early and stick to a regular investment plan. If you start now, you will make more than if you wait and invest later. The power of compounding lets you earn income on income and your money multiplies at the compounded rate of return. of acquisition

Step Seven - The final stepAll you need to do now is to get a touch with a Mutual Fund or your agent/broker and start investing. Reap the rewards in the years to come. Mutual Funds are suitable for every kind of investor - whether starting a career or retiring, conservative or risk-taking, growth-oriented or income seeking

The table below compares the investment options under the broad heads viz. return, safety, volatility, liquidity and convenience

Page 47: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

47

Return convenience Safety Volatility Liquidity

Equity High Moderate Low High High

FI Bonds Moderate High High Moderate Moderate Corporate Debentures Moderate Low Moderate Moderate Low Company Fixed Deposits Moderate Moderate Low Low Low Fixed deposits Low High High Low High PPF Moderate High High Low Moderate Life Insurance Low Moderate High Low Low Gold Moderate Low High moderate Moderate Real estate High low Moderate High Low Mutual Funds High High High Moderate High

Page 48: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

48

DIFFERENT COMPANY PROFILE

ABOUT ICICI PRUDENTIAL

Prudential ICICI Asset Management Company is the joint venture between Prudential Plc, UK's leading insurance company and ICICI Bank Ltd, India's premier financial institution. It’s the venture in the ratio of 55%: 45%.

The joint venture was formed with the key objective of providing the Indian investor mutual fund products to suit a variety of investment needs. The AMC has already launched a range of products to suit different risk and maturity profiles.

Prudential ICICI Asset Management Company Limited has a net worth of about Rs. 80.14 crore (1 crore = 10 million) as of March 31, 2004. Both Prudential and ICICI Bank Ltd have a strategic long-term commitment to the rapidly expanding financial services sector in India.

KEY INDICATORS

As on may 1998 As on 31May,2006

Asset under management Rs. 160 crore 59,143 crore

Number of funds managed

2 22

ICICI PRUDENTIAL GUIDING PRINCIPAL

ICICI Prudential will conduct its business with Honesty and trustworthiness in all interactions. A pioneering spirit and excellence in action. Collaboration and teamwork. An understanding of customer needs and the desire to satisfy them. The highest service standards. Consistently above average performance

Page 49: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

49

Name of the Mutual Fund ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund

Date of setup of Mutual Fund October 13, 1993Names of Sponser Prudential Plc and ICICI BankLimitedName of TrusteeCompany ICICI Prudential Trust LtdName of Trustee Mr.E.B.Desai-Chairman

Mr. Keki Bombi Dadiseth-Director

Mr.M.S.Parthasarthy-Director

Ms.Vishakha Mulye-DirectorName of Asset Management Company ICICI Prudential Asset Management

Company LimitedDate of Incorporation of AMC June 22, 1993

Name(s) of Director Dr. (Mrs.) Swati A PiramalMr. Ajay SrinivasanMr. B. R. GuptaMr. Dadi EngineerMr. K. S. MehtaMr. K. V. KamathMr. Pankaj RazdanMr. Vijay ThackerMs. Kalpana MorpariaMr. Vikram B. TrivediMs. Shikha Sharma

Name of Chairman Mr. K. V. Kamath

Name of Chief Executive Officer Mr. Pankaj Razdan

Name of Chief Investment Officer Mr. Nilesh ShahName(s) of Fund Manager Mr. Chaitanya Pande

Mr. Deven Sangoi

Page 50: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

50

Mr. Pankaj KajiMr. Rahul GoswamiMr. S NarenMr. Yogesh Bhatt

Name of Compliance Officer Mr. Ranganath Athreya

Name of Investor Service Officer Ms. Molly Kapoor

Name(s) of Auditors M/s N. M. Raiji & Company

Name(s) of Custodian HDFC Bank Limited

Name(s) of Registrar and Transfer Agent

Computer Age Management Services Pvt. Ltd

SPONSOR

Prudential Plc is a leading international financial services group providing retail financial products and services and fund management to many millions of customers worldwide. As a group Prudential plc has, as of December 31, 2004, over GBP187 billion of funds under management, more than 16 million customers and over 22,500 employees worldwide.

Prudential PLC was founded in 1848. Since than it has grown to become the largest provider in the UK providing the wide range of savings products for the individual including life insurance, pensions, annuities, unit trusts and personal banking. It has a presence in over 15 countries, and caters to 10 million customers.

Prudential is one of the largest UK insurers with operations in 15 countries in Asia. Asia has always been an important region for prudential and it has had a presence in Asia for

25 years. Infact prudential first overseas operation was in India, way back in 1923 to establish life and general branch agencies. In the US, prudential owns Jackson National Life, one of the leading life insurance companies.

Page 51: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

51

Prudential is focused on the integrated generation and is one of the first financial services organization to use the Internet on a fully integrated basis. In October 1998, prudential launched a “branch less” bank based on the internet usually titled as “egg:|”-www.egg.com. the bank has in a short span of its existence become a leading banking service provider in the UK. Infact in the first six month of its existence it garnered over US $ 8 billion in deposits from over 5 lakhs customers. Development of superior products

and services that offer value for money and securities while producing superior financial returns enables prudential to maximize the value of its shareholder’s investment and to establish lasting relationship with customer and policyholders.

Securities and Exchange Board of India, vide its letter no. MFD/PM/567/02 dated June 4, 2002, has accorded its approval in recognizing ICICI Bank Ltd. as a co-sponsor consequent to the merger of ICICI Ltd. with ICICI Bank Ltd.

ICICI Bank is India's second-largest bank with total assets of about Rs.146,214 crore at December 31, 2004 and profit after tax of Rs. 1,391 crore in the nine months ended December 31, 2004 (Rs. 1,637 crore in fiscal 2004). ICICI Bank has a network of about 530 branches and extension counters and over 1,880 ATMs. ICICI Bank offers a wide range of banking products and financial services to corporate and retail customers through a variety of delivery channels and through its specialized subsidiaries and affiliates in the areas of investment banking, life and non-life insurance, venture capital and asset management. ICICI Bank set up its international banking group in fiscal 2002 to cater to the cross-border needs of clients and leverage on its domestic banking strengths to offer products internationally. ICICI Bank currently has subsidiaries in the United Kingdom and Canada, branches in Singapore and Bahrain and representative offices in the United States, China, United Arab Emirates, Bangladesh and South Africa.

ICICI Bank was originally promoted in 1994 by ICICI Limited, an Indian financial institution, and was its wholly owned subsidiary.

ABOUT UNIT TRUST OF INDIA

Page 52: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

52

Unit trust of india (UTI) is India's largest mutual fund organization. UTI manages funds

over RS. 75159 Crore as on 30/06/2003 and over 43 million investor accounts. The faith

and confidence of investors stems from UTI’s commitment, as reflected in its long track

record of overthree decades, to ensure its investors safety, liquidity and attractive yield on

their investments.

UTI was set up in 1964 by an act of parliament. UTI presently occupies a special position

in Indian capital market. With a servicing and distribution network of 54 branch offices,

295 Chief Representatives and about 75,000 agents, UTI provides the complete range of

services to its investors.

UTI has set up associates in the fields of banking, securities trading, investor servicing,

investment advice and training, towards creating a diversified financial conglomerate and

meeting investors’ varying needs under a common umbrella.

PRODUCTS OF THE ICICI PRUDENTIAL COMPANY:

Page 53: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

53

The Company provides three types of funds:

1. Equity Funds

2. Balanced Funds

3. Debt Funds

EQUITY FUNDS:

ICICI Prudential Growth Plan

Type Open-ended Equity Fund

Investment PatternEquity & Equity related 95% & Debt, Money Market and Cash 5%.

Fund Objective

To seek to generate long-term capital appreciation from a portfolio that is invested predominantly in equity and equity related securities

Investment horizonSuitable for investors who seek to invest in equity securities.

ICICI Prudential Tax Plan

Page 54: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

54

Type Open-ended Equity Linked Saving Scheme

Investment PatternEquity & Equity related 90% & Debt, Money Market and Cash 10%.

Fund Objective

To seek to generate long-term capital appreciation from a portfolio that is invested predominantly in equity and equity related securities

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seeking to benefit from Medium term investment of funds with tax benefits for capital appreciation.

ICICI Prudential Fmcg Plan

Type Open-ended FMCG Sectoral Fund

Investment PatternEquity & Equity related in FMCG Companies 90% in & Debt, Money Market and Cash 10%.

Fund Objective

To seek to generate long-term capital appreciation from a portfolio that is invested predominantly in equity and equity related securities of FMCG Companies.

Investment horizonSectoral fund, suitable for investors seeking an exposure to the FMCG Sector.

ICICI Prudential Technology Plan

Page 55: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

55

Type Open-ended Equity Fund

Investment PatternEquity and Equity related 90-95% & Debt, Money Market and Cash 5-10%.

Fund Objective

To generate long-term capital appreciation by investing in equity and equity related securities of technology intensive companies.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors who seek an exposure to IT, Telecom, Life Sciences and Media sectors

ICICI Prudential Power Plan

Type Open-ended Growth Fund

Investment Pattern

Equity and Equity related securities including non convertible portion of convertible debentures - Up to 95% and at least 5% in Debt and Money Market securities.

Fund Objective

To generate capital appreciation by actively investing in equity/ equity related securities. For defensive considerations, the Scheme may invest in debt, money market instruments, to the extent permitted under the Regulations. The AMC will have the discretion to completely or partially invest in any of the type of securities stated above so as to maximize the returns.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seeking long-term capital appreciation through investments in equity and equity related securities.

Page 56: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

56

ICICI Prudential Index Fund

Type Open-ended Index Linked Growth Scheme

Investment Pattern

Equity stocks drawn from the components of the S&P CNX Nifty and the exchange traded derivatives on the S&P CNX Nifty - upto 100%. Money Market instruments - upto 10%.

Fund Objective

The Nifty Plan of the Index Fund seeks to track the returns of the S&P CNX Nifty through investments in a basket of stocks drawn from the constituents of the above index

Investment horizonSuitable for investors who seek to invest in equity securities

ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan

Type Open-ended equity fund

Investment Pattern0 - 100% = Equity & Equity related securities. 0 - 100% = Debt & Money Market Instruments

Fund Objective To generate capital appreciation by actively investing in equity / equity related securities. For defensive considerations, the Scheme may invest in debt, money market instruments, to the extent permitted under the Regulations. The AMC will have the discretion to completely or partially invest

Page 57: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

57

in any of the type of securities stated above so as to maximize the returns.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors with an investment horizon of 2 – 3 years

ICICI Prudential Discovery Fund

Type Open-ended Equity Fund

Investment Pattern Equity & Equity related securities 80% to 100%, Cash & Money Market instrument 20%.

Fund Objective

To generate returns through a combination of dividend income and capital appreciation by investing primarily in a well-diversified portfolio of value stocks. Value stocks are those, which have attractive valuations in relation to earnings or book value or current and/or future dividends.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors who seek to invest in equity securities.

ICICI Prudentil Emerging Star Fund

Type Open-ended Equity Fund

Investment PatternEquity & Equity related securities 90% to 100%, Cash & Money Market instruments 0% to 10%.

Fund Objective To generate capital appreciation by actively investing in diversified mid cap stocks. The

Page 58: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

58

Scheme will invest primarily in companies that have a market capitalization between Rs. 100 crores to Rs. 2000 crores.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors who seek to invest in equity securities.

ICICI Prudential Infrastructure Fund

Type Open-ended equity Fund

Investment Pattern

Equity and Equity related 70 - 100% & Debt, Money Market Instruments and Call money (Including securitised debt of upto 20% of the assets) 0 – 30%.

Fund Objective

To generate capital appreciation and income distribution to unit holders by investing predominantly in equity/equity related securities of the companies belonging to the infrastructure industries and balance in debt securities and money market instruments including call money.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seeking long-term capital appreciation through investments in equity and equity related securities.

ICICI Prudential Services Industries Fund

Type

Page 59: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

59

Open-ended equity Fund

Investment Pattern

Equity and Equity related 70 - 100% & Debt, Money Market Instruments and Call money (Including securitised debt of up to 20% of the assets, Including derivatives istruments to the extent of 50% of the net assets.) 0 - 30%

Fund Objective

The Scheme is an open-ended equity Scheme seeking to provide capital appreciation and income distribution to unit holders by investing predominantly in equity/equity related securities of the companies belonging to the service industries and the balance in debt securities and money market instruments including call money.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seeking long-term capital appreciation through investments in equity and equity related securities.

ICICI Prudential Equity And Derivative Fund

Page 60: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

60

ICICI Prudential Equity and Derivatives Income Optimiser Plan

ICICI Prudential Equity and Derivatives Wealth Optimiser Plan

Type Open-ended equity Fund

Open-ended equity Fund

Investment Pattern 65% to 80% in Equity and Equity Derivatives( Equity un hedged exposure limited to 5%)20% to 35% in debt instruments

65% to 100%in Equity and Equity Derivatives( Equity un hedged exposure limited to 80%)0% to 35% in debt instruments

Fund Objective To seek to generate low volatility returns by using arbitrage and other derivatives strategies in equity market and investments in short term debt port folio

To seek to provide capital appreciation and income distribution to the investors by using equity derivatives strategies, arbitrage opportunities and pure equity investments

BALANCED FUNDS

ICICI Prudential Balanced Fund

Page 61: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

61

Type Open ended Balanced Fund

Investment PatternUnder normal circumstances Equity and Equity related instruments up to 60% & Debt, Money Market and Cash up to 40%.

Fund Objective

To seek to generate long-term capital appreciation and current income from a portfolio that is invested in equity and equity related securities as well as in fixed income securities.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seeking long term capital appreciation and current income.

ICICI Prudential Child Care Plan- Study Plan

Type Open ended fund ( Study Plan)

Investment Pattern

Equity and Equity related securities 0-15%, Debt Securities, Money Market Instruments, Securitised Debt and Cash (including money at call) 85-100%.

Fund Objective

To generate current income by creating a portfolio that is invested in debt, money market instruments and equity and equity related securities.

Investment horizonIdeal for investors seeking current income and long term capital appreciation over low to medium term horizon.

ICICI Prudential Child Care Plan – Gift Plan

Page 62: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

62

Type Open ended fund ( Gift Plan)

Investment Pattern

Equity & Equity related securities 51-60%, Debt Securities, Money Market Instruments, Securitised Debt & Cash (including money at call) 40-49%.

Fund Objective

To generate capital appreciation by creating a portfolio that is invested in equity and equity related securities and debt and money market instruments.

Investment horizonIdeal for investors seeking current income and long term capital appreciation over low to medium term horizon.

DEBT FUNDS

ICICI Prudential Liquid Plan - Growth Option

Type Open-ended Liquid Income Fund

Investment PatternMoney Market 80% & Debt Instruments 20%

Fund ObjectiveTo generate reasonable returns from low risk investments which provide high level of liquidity.

ICICI Prudential Liquid Plan- Dividend Option

Page 63: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

63

Type Open-ended Liquid Income Fund

Investment PatternMoney Market 80% & Debt Instruments 20%

Fund ObjectiveTo generate reasonable returns from low risk investments which provide high level of liquidity.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for short-term investment at relatively low risk.

ICICI Prudential Income Plan

Type Open-ended Debt Fund

Investment PatternDebt Securities up to 75% & Money Market & Cash up to 25%

Fund Objective

To generate income through investments in a basket of debt instruments of various maturities with a view to maximise income while maintaining the optimum balance of yield,safety and liquidity.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a medium to long term horizon.

Page 64: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

64

ICICI Prudential Gilt Fund- Investment Plan

Type Open-ended medium-term Gilt Fund

Investment PatternGilt Securities (incl. Treasury Bills). Average Maturity normally not to exceed 8 years.

Fund ObjectiveTo generate income through investment in Gilts of various maturities.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a medium to long term horizon

ICICI Prudential Gilt Fund Treasury Plan

Type Open-ended short-term Gilt Fund

Investment PatternGilt Securities (incl. Treasury Bills). Average Maturity normally not to exceed 3 years.

Fund ObjectiveTo generate income through investment in Gilts of various maturities.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a short to medium term horizon.

ICICI Prudential Monthly Income Fund

Page 65: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

65

TypeOpen-ended Income Fund with no assured returns

Investment Pattern

Debt Securities, money market instruments,securitised debt and Cash up to 85%, Equity and equity related securities 15%.

Fund Objective

To generate regular income through investments in fixed income securities and also to generate long term capital appreciation by investing a portion in equity and equity related instruments.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors seek regular returns and for the medium to long term investor.

ICICI Prudential Fixed Maturity Plan

Type Open-ended debt fund

Investment Pattern100% in Debt Securities, Money Market, Securitised Debt & Cash (including money at call).

Fund ObjectiveTo generate regular returns from a basket of Debt Securities especially for investors who have a fixed time horizon.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a medium to long term horizon.

Page 66: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

66

ICICI Prudential Short Term Plan

Type Open Ended Income Fund

Investment PatternDebt Securities up to 100%,Money Market Instruments and Cash up to 50%.

Fund ObjectiveTo generate income through investment in basket of debt securities and money market instruments.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a short to medium term horizon.

ICICI Prudential Long Term Plan

Type Open Ended Income Fund

Investment PatternDebt Securities up to 100% & Money Market and Cash up to 10%

Fund Objective

To generate income through investments in a basket of debt and money market instruments of various maturities with a view to maximise income while maintaining the optimum balance of yield,safety and liquidity.

Investment horizon Suitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a

Page 67: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

67

medium to long term horizon.

ICICI Prudential Flexible Income Plan

Type Open-ended Income Fund

Investment Pattern

10 - 100% = Money market and Debentures with residual maturity of less than 1 year. 0 – 90% = Debt instruments with maturity more than 1 year.

Fund Objective

To generate income through investments in a range of debt instruments and money market instruments of various maturities with a view to maximizing income while maintaining the optimum balance of yield, safety and liquidity.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking at avenues to invest surplus funds in medium to long-term horizon

ICICI Prudential Sweep Plan

Type Open-ended Liquid Fund

Investment PatternMoney Market instruments including money at call -Up to 100%. Debt Securities- Up to 40%

Fund Objective To seek to provide reasonable returns, commensurate with low risk while providing a high level of liquidity, through investments made primarily in money market and debt securities. The aim is to

Page 68: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

68

optimize returns while providing liquidity.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for short-term investment at relatively low risk.

ICICI Prudential Floating Rate Plan

Type Open-ended Income Fund

Investment Pattern65 - 100% = Floating Rate Debt Instruments. 0-35% = Fixed rate debt instruments with maturity less than 1 year.

Fund Objective

To generate income consistent with the prudent risk from a portfolio comprising substantially of floating rate debt instruments, fixed rate debt instruments swapped for floating rate return and also fixed rate instruments and money market instruments.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking at avenues to invest surplus funds in medium term horizon

ICICI PrudentialDeposit Plus NRI Series

Type Open-ended Debt Fund

Investment Pattern

Money Market instruments & Cash (including- money at call) Up to 100 %, Short term and medium term debt securities/ debt instruments and Securities debt Up to 100 %.

Fund Objective To seek to generate regular returns from a

Page 69: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

69

basket of Debt Securities especially for investors who have a fixed time horizon.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a medium to long-term horizon.

ICICI PrudentialGilt Investment- PF

Type Open-ended Gilt Fund(Investment - PF)

Investment Pattern

The Plan aims at generating returns commensurate with zero credit risk by investing in securities created and issued by the Central Government and /or a State Government and/or repos/reverse repos in such government securities as may be permitted by RBI. The Plan may also invest a portion of the corpus in the call money market or in an alternative investment for the call money market as may be provided by RBI to meet the liquidity requirements. The Fund will seek to underwrite issuance of Government Securities subject to the prevailing rules and regulations as may be specified by SEBI/ RBI in this respect and may also participate in the auction of Government securities from time to time.

Fund Objective

The primary investment objective of the Plan is to generate income through investments in Gilts of various maturities. However, there can be no assurance that the investment objective of the Plan will be realized.

Investment horizon Suitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a

Page 70: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

70

medium to long term

ICICIPrudential Gilt Treasury- PF

Type Open-ended Gilt Fund(Treasury - PF)

Investment Pattern

The Plan aims at generating returns commensurate with zero credit risk by investing in securities created and issued by the Central Government and /or a State Government and/or repost/reverse repost in such government securities as may be permitted by RBI. The Plan may also invest a portion of the corpus in the call money market or in an alternative investment for the call money market as may be provided by RBI to meet the liquidity requirements. The Fund will seek to underwrite issuance of Government Securities subject to the prevailing rules and regulations as may be specified by SEBI/ RBI in this respect and may also participate in the auction of Government securities from time to time.

Fund Objective

The primary investment objective of the Plan is to generate income through investments in Gilts of various maturities. However, there can be no assurance that the investment objective of the Plan will be realized.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking for steady returns at relatively low risk across a medium to long term horizon

Page 71: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

71

ICICI Prudential Income Multiplier Fund

Type Open-ended Debt Fund

Investment PatternEquity & Equity Related securities 0-30%, Debt Instruments 65-100%, Cash & Money Market Instruments 0-5%.

Fund Objective

To generate long-term capital appreciation from a portfolio that is invested predominantly in debt and money market securities and the balance in equity and equity related securities.

Investment horizon

Suitable for investors those who have conventionally been opting for fixed income instruments and are now looking at taking advantage of the potential of equity

ICICI Prudential Long Term Floating Rate Plan

TypeOpen-ended Debt Fund (Long Term Floating Rate Plan)

Investment Pattern65 - 100% = Floating Rate Debt Instruments. 0-35% = Fixed rate debt instruments.

Fund Objective

To generate income through investments in a range of debt and money market instruments of various maturities with a view to maximizing income while maintaining the optimum balance to yield, safety and liquidity.

Investment horizonSuitable for investors looking at avenues to invest surplus funds in medium term horizon.

Page 72: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

72

Distrbution : ICICI Prudential AMC

ICICI Prudential have multiple channels.The focus is on growing bankig and agency channels to drive retail penetrationCurrently it has30,000 points of sales to access retail institutional and HNWI customers

ICICI Prudential have following distribution channelBranchesSecurities

Banks Agency Others

ICICI Prudential AMC : CustomersGrowth and demographics

Aggressive growth in retail customers; Equity, Non- Metro and Agency keydrivers

Growth in Focus AreasEquity Asset (FuM)– 97% growth (3 Yr CAGR)– Contributes over 32% of FuMGeography (Customers)– More than 60% growth in non metrocustomers over 3 yrsChannel (Customers)– More than 50% growth ofcustomers in agency channelOur Customer FocusRetail MF –

Page 73: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

73

PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF UTI MUTUAL FUND

Every year, millions of Indians entrust their savings to Unit Trust of India to build up a

financially secure future. This faith and confidence of investors stem from UTI's

commitment, as reflected in its long track record to ensure its investors, safety, liquidity

and attractive yield on their investments.

Set up in 1964, by an Act of Parliament, UTI Act 1963, UTI has grown into one of the

biggest player and carved out a special position in the Indian capital market.

Today, UTI manages an aggregate portfolio of Rs. 72,698 Crore as on 31/12/1999 and

services 45 million investor accounts under 90 saving schemes catering to varying needs

of different classes of investors.

UTI has a servicing and distribution network of 53 branch offices, 320 District

Representatives and about 87,000 agents. It provides a complete range of services to its

investors at a low gross cost of less than 1.01 percent of investible funds and does not

charge any asset management fee.

Management

ChairmanShri M Damodaran

Executive Directors

Shri K G Vassal

Shri A K Thakur

Shri M M Kapur

Shri S K Basu

Shri B G Daga

Shri B S Pandi

Shri D S R Murthy

Page 74: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

74

AMC, FUND MANAGEMENT TEAM AND SCHEME

Savings Plans and Funds

UTI is a symbol of trust and confidence among Indian investors. In the last seven years,

the number of schemes managed by UTI increased from 35 to 92, while the number of

unitholding accounts jumped sevenfold, from 65 lakhs to over 450 lakhs.

UTI's expanding product range cover a broad spectrum of investment goals and includes

open end and closed-end income and capital accumulation funds. Among the most

popular are Unit Scheme 1964 and Master series equity schemes such as Master-share,

Master-plus, Master Equity Plans, etc.

UTI also manages schemes aimed at meeting specific needs like-

Low cost insurance cover (ULIP)

Monthly income needs of retired persons and women.

Income and liquidity needs of religious and charitable institutions and trusts.

Building up funds to meet cost of higher education and career plans for children.

Future wealth and income needs of girl child and women.

Building savings to cover medical insurance at old age.

Wealth accumulation to meet income needs after retirement.

Reaching Investors

Individual household investors account for 99% of UTI's investor accounts and about

65% of unit capital of UTI schemes. Products are distributed through a marketing force

of about 87,000 commission-based canvassing agents trained to explain the products and

provide related service support to investors.

Today, these agents are supervised by 320 Chief Representatives who guide the investors,

organize, train and motivate the agents in their respective areas of operation (specified

districts).

Page 75: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

75

Investors under various schemes of UTI are now serviced through 53 UTI branches, 213

collection centers and offices of 6 Registrar and Transfer Agencies appointed by UTI.

Besides there are 52 franchises offices, which accept applications and distribute

certificates to unit holders. UTI has set up its own associate company, UTI-Investor

Services Limited (UTIISL), to meet the growing needs of unit holder servicing.

UTI is also currently implementing a technology upgradation program, involving

networking of on-line computer systems at UTI's offices, and offices of Registrars and

Transfer Agencies. This would enable UTI to improve service quality significantly.

UTI publishes weekly/daily NAVs for all its listed schemes and offers a prospectus for

every scheme. It also publishes half yearly results for all schemes and releases

information on portfolio as also largest shareholding for growth schemes and Unit

Scheme 1964. UTI adheres to disclosure requirements specified by SEBI.

Fund Deployment

Equity Investing : More than fifty percent of total funds of UTI Schemes are invested in

equity. UTI is the largest operator in the Indian equity market with total investments

worth Rs 35,007.83 crores at book value. Its various funds collectively hold stocks in

more than 1500 Indian companies and account for over 8 percent of the market

capitalization of all listed scrips on the Mumbai Stock Exchange.

Corporate debt: UTI is one of the main providers of debt finance to the corporate sector.

Investment in corporate debt instruments account for 38 percent of the total investible

funds. Credit market operations cover a range of instruments including publicly issued

and privately placed debentures, bonds and medium term notes. UTI's debt portfolio

quality is represented by 98 percent performing assets.

UTI is also one of the largest investors, among non-banking institutions in the money

market. About 11 percent of the total investible funds is accounted for by government

paper and call deposits.

Page 76: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

76

Investment Guidelines

Consistent with the UTI Act, UTI's investment decisions are guided by investors'

interests. UTI's operations are guided by UTI Act, 1963 and UTI's investments are

subject to prudential exposure norms and limits laid down by UTI regulations. It cannot

invest more than 10 percent of a particular schemes corpus in the equity of any one

company. UTI's investment decisions are backed by inputs from independent groups set-

up for equity research, investment appraisal and credit rating.

A Conglomerate with a vision

As a distinctive financial institution, UTI manages funds raised through common

investible vehicles and at the same time provides companies financial services, including

underwriting.

To create a diversified financial conglomerate and to meet investor's varying needs under

a common umbrella, UTI has set up a number of associate companies in the field of

banking, securities trading, investor servicing, investment advice and training.

UTI Bank Ltd (1994)--the first private sector bank to be set up under RBI guidelines.

UTI Securities Exchange Ltd (1994)--the first institutionally sponsored corporate

stock-broking firm.

UTI Investor Services Ltd (1993)--the first institutionally sponsored Registrar and

Transfer agency.

UTI Institute of Capital Markets (1989)--the first such institute in Asia, excluding

Japan.

UTI Investment Advisory Services Ltd (1988)--the first Indian Investment Advisor

registered with SEC, US.

Consistent with financial sector deregulation, UTI has plans to enter insurance,

pension fund and credit rating businesses.

Page 77: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

77

Global Links

UTI pioneered the off-shore fund investment in Indian securities. The India Fund

launched in 1986 as a closed-end fund, became a multi-class open-ended fund in 1994.

Thereafter, in 1988 UTI floated the India Growth Fund which is listed on the New York

Stock Exchange. Both India Fund and India Growth Fund have increased their corpus

through rights issues. Besides the Columbus India Fund, launched in 1994, UTI launched

the India Access Fund, an Indian Index Fund (tracking the NSE 50 index) in 1996.

UTI International Limited is a 100% subsidiary of Unit Trust of India, registered in the

island of Guernsey. This company was set up with the primary objective of

administration and marketing of various offshore funds managed by UTI as also to act as

the management company for these funds as required by the Guernsey Law. UTI

International Ltd has an office in London to market UTI's offshore funds to institutional

clients in UK, Europe and USA. It is also responsible for developing new products as

well as new business opportunities of UTI. This office also looks after ongoing investor

relations with foreign investors and has succeeded in greatly improving communication

between UTI and its clients and distributors abroad. UTI International Ltd has played an

important role in launching three new offshore funds of UTI - the India IT Fund Ltd, the

India Debt Fund Ltd and the India Public sector Fund Ltd.

To cater to various needs of NRI investors based in the Gulf region, UTI has a

Representative office at Dubai. The representative office covers all the six GCC countries

viz. UAE, Oman, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Bahrain. The Dubai office of UTI acts

as a liaison office between our NRI investors in the Gulf and UTI offices all over India.

Besides providing information on current and new schemes of UTI, it also co-ordinates

with UTI offices in India for all after-sale requests of unitholders/agents.

In the recent past, UTI has extended its support to the development of Unit Trusts in

other developing countries, like Sri Lanka and Egypt. Besides providing technical advise,

UTI also participated in the equity capital of the Unit Trust Management Company of Sri

Lanka.

Page 78: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

78

Research strength

UTI has its own research set-up to deal with different areas. The areas of research

analysis cover macro economy, capital markets, financial sector and mutual funds.

Industry and corporate performance are also covered by Equity Research and Credit

rating groups.

UTI Institute of Capital Markets conducts training programmes for the financial

community and helps develop modern and scientific approach towards investment

management. It also serves as a forum to discuss ideas and issues relevant to the capital

market besides publishing research papers relating to capital market.

Page 79: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

79

Institution Building

UTI has played a significant role in institution-building. It has helped promote/co-

promote many institutions that would aid the healthy development of the financial sector,

and the economy in general. These institutions include-

Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (ILFS).

Credit Rating and Information Services Ltd (CRISIL).

Stock Holding Corporation of India (SHCIL).

Technology Development Corporation of India Ltd. (TDICI).

Over-the Counter Exchange of India Limited (OTCEI).

National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL).

North Eastern Development Finance Corporation Ltd (NEDFCL).

Into the future

With the likely improvement in stock markets over the future, UTI plans to introduce

more index funds, money market mutual funds, sector specific funds, capital gains fund

and infrastructure fund. UTI also plans to provide fund management services to pension

funds. UTI contemplates significant organisational strengthening, consistent with the

anticipated fast growth in its various activities, in the emerging economic environment.

Once the regulatory guidelines are laid down, UTI intends to offer benefits of investing in

offshore markets to its investors.

Page 80: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

80

UTI ASSOCIATES

UTI's associate companies operate in the fields of banking, securities trading, investor

servicing, investment advice and training.

UTI Institute of Capital Market (UTI-ICM)

UTI Institute of Capital Market is a specialised training and research facility established

with the objective of promoting professional development of capital market participants.

It was set up as a non-profit educational society by the Unit Trust of India. It provides

specialised professional development programmes for the varied constituents of the

capital markets and is engaged in focused research and consultancy activities. Training

programmes are conducted throughout the year in four main thrust areas: Investment

Analysis and Management, Investment Banking, Corporate Finance and Risk

Management. The Institute has excellent library and residential facilities.

UTI Securities Exchange Ltd. (UTI-SEL)

UTI SECURITIES EXCHANGE LTD., (UTISEL), incorporated on June 28, 1994 with a

paid-up capital of Rs.300 million is wholly-owned by Unit Trust of India. UTI promoted

UTISEL is an independent professional entity providing secondary market trading

facilities as well as investment banking and other related services. All acitivities of the

company are regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India. Over a period of

time the company has built up a reputation for transparent and fair execution of orders of

clients. All the staff at UTISEL strive to provide high quality services to the clients. It

currently has significant market shares in the institutional broking and merchant banking

segments. The company has memberships in National Stock Exchange (NSE), Bombay

Stock Exchange (BSE), Over The Counter Exchange of India (OTCEI) and Ahmedabad

Stock Exchange (ASE). It is also a member of the National Securities Depository Limited

(NSDL).

UTI Investment Advisory Services Ltd.

UTI Investment Advisory Services Ltd (UTI IAS) is an US SEC-registered investment

advisor to the India Growth Fund, the NYSE listed fund, under the US Investment

Page 81: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

81

Advisers Act of 1940. UTI IAS manages the portfolio of India Growth Fund. UTI IAS

also provides investment research and back-office support to other offshore funds of UTI,

namely, India Fund, India Access Fund, India Debt Fund, India Information Technology

Fund and India Public Sector Fund. The net asset value of all offshore funds as on 30th

June 1999 was Rs.17,110 million.

UTI Investor Services Ltd. (UTI-ISL)

UTI Investor Services Ltd. helps UTI in rendering prompt and efficient services to the

investors. UTI-ISL has the latest information technology tools to achieve this.

UTI-ISL is Registrar and Transfer Agent for 32 UTI schemes viz. DIP-95, MIP-95, MIP-

95(II), MIP-95(III), MIP-96, MIP-96(II), MIP-96(III), MIP-97, MIP-97(II), MIP-97(III),

MIP-97(V), MIP 98(II), MIP-98(IV), MIP-99, GCGIP-94, EOF-96, MEP-97, UTI NRI

FUND, UTI-GSF, UTI G-SEC, CGGF(new), CGGF(old), RUP(new), CRTS, GUP, PEF,

RBUP, CCCF,SCUP, UTI Bond Fund, Master Index Fund and Equity Tax Savings Plan.

UTI Bank Ltd.

UTI Bank incorporated in 1994, was the first private sector bank to be set up under RBI

guidelines announced in 1993. UTI holds 61.5% of the bank's equity. The Bank has a

network of 38 branches spread across the country. All branches are fully computerized.

The Bank offers a wide range of retail, corporate and forex services. For the retail

segment, the Bank has introduced an ATM card styled "TRUST24", for transactions on

ATM available 24 hours at any of the 50 ATMs installed across the country.

All branches accept subscriptions for UTI schemes. Specialised service counters are also

available at some centres. For UTI's Money Market Fund, UTI Bank is the sole Bank

authorised to accept subscriptions under the scheme.

UTI International Ltd.

UTI International Limited (formerly known as UTI (Gurnsey) Ltd.) is a 100% subsidiary

of Unit Trust of India, registered in the island of Guernsey, Channel islands. This

company was set up with the primary objective of administration and marketing of

various offshore funds managed by UTI as also to act as the management company for

Page 82: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

82

these funds as required by the Guernsey Law. UTI International Ltd has an office in

London to market UTI's offshore funds to institutional clients in UK, Europe and USA. It

is also responsible for developing new products as well as new business opportunities of

UTI. This office also looks after ongoing investor relations with foreign investors and has

succeeded in greatly improving communication between UTI and its clients and

distributors abroad. UTI International Ltd has played an important role in launching three

new offshore funds of UTI - the India IT Fund Ltd, the India Debt Fund Ltd and the India

Public sector Fund Ltd.

SCHEMES OF UNIT TRUST OF INDIA

Sr. No. Name of scheme

1 Unit Scheme 1964 (US 64)*

2 Unit Linked Insurance Plan (ULIP)

3 Charitable Religious Trust Societies (CRTS 81)

4 Children’s Career Plan (earlier CCCF 93)

5 Rajlakshmi Unit Plan (II) 1994 (RUP-II 94)

6 Grihalakshmi Unit Plan 1994 (GUP 94)

7 Retirement Benefit Plan 1994 (RBUP 94)

8 Unit Scheme 1995 (US 95)

9 Monthly Income Plan 1995 (MIP 95)

10 Monthly Income Plan 1996 (MIP 96)

Page 83: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

83

11 Monthly Income Plan 1996 (II) (MIP 96 II)

12 Monthly Income Plan 1996 (III) (MIP 96 III)

13 Deferred Income Plan 1991 (DIP 91)

14 Institutional Investors' Special Fund Unit Scheme 1996 (IISFUS 96)

15 Monthly Income Plan 1996 (IV) (MIP 96 IV)

16 Monthly Income Plan 1997 (MIP 97)

17 Monthly Income Plan 1997 (II) (MIP 97 II)

18 Institutional Investors' Special Fund Unit Scheme 1997 (IISFUS 97)

19 Monthly Income Plan 1997 (III) (MIP 97 III)

20 Monthly Income Plan 1997 (IV) (MIP 97 IV)

21 Monthly Income Plan 1997 (V) (MIP 97 V)

22 Institutional Investors' Special Fund Unit Scheme 1997 (II) (IISFUS 97 II)

23 Monthly Income Plan 1998 (MIP 98)

24 Institutional Investors' Special Fund Unit Scheme 1998 (IISFUS 98)

25 UTI NRI Fund 1998

26 UTI Bond Fund 1998 (UBF 98)

27 Monthly Income Plan 1998 (II) (MIP 98 II)

Page 84: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

84

28 UTI Small Investors’ Fund 1998

29 Monthly Income Plan 1998 (III) (MIP 98 III)

30 Monthly Income Plan 1998 (IV) (MIP 98 IV)

31 Institutional Investors' Special Fund Unit Scheme 1998 (II) (IISFUS 98 II)

32 Monthly Income Plan 1998 (V) (MIP 98 V)

33 Children’s Gift Growth Fund 1999 (CGGF 99)

34 Rajlakshmi Unit Plan 1999 (RUP 99)

35 Monthly Income Plan 1999 (MIP 99)

36 UTI G-Sec Fund 1999

37 Monthly Income Plan 1999 (II) (MIP 99 II)

38 Monthly Income Plan 2003 (MIP 2003)

39 Monthly Income Plan 2003 (Second) (MIP 2003 Second)

40 Monthly Income Plan 2003 (Third) (MIP 2003 Third)

41 UTI Money Market Fund 1997 (MMF)

Page 85: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

85

COMPARISION OF ICICI PRUDENTIAL AND UTI WITH OTHER AMC’S ON DIFFERENT PARAMETERS

Asset Under Management of different Asset Management Companies

Asset Under Management in Rs croreMutual Fund April -07 May-07 Change % ChangeReliance Capital Mutual Fund 48,828 59,143 10,315 21.13ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund 46,268 50,703 8,435 19.96UTI Mutual Fund 35,517 40,070 4,553 12.82HDFC Mutual Fund 31,485 36,147 4,662 14.81Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund 24,510 26,276 1,766 7.21Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund 18,616 23,719 5,104 27.42SBI Mutual Fund 18,339 19,661 1,322 7.21Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund 13,082 16,723 3,641 27.83Standard Chartered Mutual Fund

13,976 16,170 2,194 15.70

HSBC Mutual Fund 11,867 14,586 2,719 22.91Tata Mutual Fund 12,591 14,082 1,491 11.84Principal Mutual Fund 9,541 13,149 3,608 37.81DSP Merrill Mutual Fund 11,854 11,853 0 0.00Sundaram Mutual Fund 7,975 10,145 2,170 27.21LIC Mutual Fund 9,039 9,904 866 9.58Fidelity Mutual Fund 6,534 8,813 2,280 34.89Deutsche Mutual Fund 6,410 7,284 874 13.64ABN Amro Mutual Fund 6,046 6,874 828 13.70Bench Mark Mutual Fund 4,526 6,418 1,891 41.79ING Vysya Mutual Fund 3,169 5,435 2,266 71.50JM Financial Mutual Fund 3,599 3,773 173 4.81Lotous India Mutual Fund 2,087 3,623 1,536 73.62Morgan Stanely Mutual Fund 3,039 3,181 142 4.68Canbank Mutual Fund 2,369 2,910 541 22.84

Page 86: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

86

DBS CholaMutual Fund 2,109 2,473 364 17.27

Taurus Mutual Fund 302 305 3 1.20Sahara MUTUAL fund 178 176 -2 -.68Escort Mutual Fund 123 132 132 7.38BOB Mutual Fund 92 92 98 6.00Quantum Mutual Fund 57 57 61 6.39

Above table shows the asset under Management of different Asset Management Companies. If we analyse thae table we find that private sector has grown significantly.Reliance Mutual fund is on First slot showing a growth of 21.23%since month of april.RELIANCEmutual fund asset has grownat a faster pace 127% in 2007.ICICI Prudential is on second slot showing a growth of 19.94%.ICICI Prudential asset has grown with 66% in year 2007. Public sector Mutual fundUTI has slipped to third position.It has lost the supremacy in asset manage ment game something which it had done from decades.Money inflow in Fixed Maturity Plan and liquid plan from corporate has helped the asset management companies to grow their assets under management

Profit of different Asset Management CompaniesUTI MF ahead on profit street even as AUM slipsBut Reliance MF ,HDFC AMC clock faster profit growthUTI mutual fund has lost the supremacy in asset management game.But UTI mutual fund continues to hold a trump card in absolute terms, IT is the most profitable mutual fundUTI has reported a profit after tax of little less than Rs 150 Crore for financial year 2007.Even last year .UTI was the only Mutual fund with a net profit of Rs 100 crore. However ,the growth in profits has slowed down to 12%in 2007, as compared to 30 % in 2006 .UTI mutual fund should take it as a alarm. other wise it will lost the supremacy in profit game also.Because private sector mutual funds too have been growing in a brisk pace.HDFC AMC has reported a profit after tax if Rs 67.5 crore in 2007,up 47% year on year While reliance mutual fund’s profit after tax was Rs 50.7 crore up 74%over the

Page 87: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

87

previous year. While HDFC continued to grow at last year,s levels, Reliance mutual fund bottam line has more than doubled.There is a high probability of a suffle in in the top three positions in terms of absolute profits

Following Table shows that how much money in percentage is invested in which plan

Growth 34.52%

Income 36.32

Fund of Fund 0.67

Gilt 0.69

Liquid(Money Market) 21.92

Balanced 2.77

ELSS 3.11

Asset:Fund Category AUM ON APRIL 2007

Equity Diversified 97923.00

Equity Midcap 1421.30

Equity Contra 2861.46

Equity : Tax planing 11055.74

EQUITY sectoral 700.21

Hybrid 19530.33

MIPS 6193.10

Det medium term 7162.61

Debt- short term 1291.24

Debt speciality 89744.46

Cash 95613.32

Gilt long term 1516.78

Gilt short term 630.80

Page 88: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

88

Following Table shows the percentage of debt and equity in assets under management of different asset manage ment companies

If we analyse that table we find that ICICI Prudential has less percentage of equity assets in his asset under management compare to other top asset management companies.I t is an alarming situation for I CICI Prudential. It has the adverse effect on profit because major part of growth has taken place in debt assets in Icici Prudential which yield lower fees to mutual funds.In ICICI Prudential fixed maturity plan is on the rage in the past six to eight months.It is noy very profitable proposition as these products earn management fees in the range of O.O4% TO 0.07%.

Mutual Fund Name EQUITY% Debt%

HDFC Mutual Fund 48.24 51.76

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund 34.16 65.84

Reliance Mutual Fund 37.40 62.60

SBI Mutual Fund 71.83 28.17

Tata Mutual Fund 35.14 64.86

UTI Mutual Fund 57.01 42.99

Page 89: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

89

 1Year Return And Ranking of VariousOpen Ended Mutual FundsCategory Debt(Floating RateLT)

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 year

Rank1 year

Principal Floating Rate Flexible Maturity

Sep 8 2004 8.13 1

ABN AMRO Money Plus Reg Oct 19 2005

8.05 2

Birla Floating Rate LT Jun 4 2003 7.84 3Templeton Floating Rate LT Feb2 2002 7.84 4Tata Floating LT Sep 05

20057.67 5

Kotak Floating Rate LT Aug 6 2004 7.65 6ING Vysa Floating Rate Oct 7 2004 7.56 7HSBC Floating Rate LT Regular Nov 8 2004 7.38 8ICICI Floating Rate LT A Sep4 2004 7.17 9Grindlays Floating Rate LT A Jul 30 2004 7.01 10

Category(Debt Floating Rate LT Inst)Scheme Name Launch Return 1

YearRank 1 year

SUNDARAM BNP Paribas FLRT INST

Dec24 2004 24.89 1

Templeton Floating Sep06 2005 8.26 2

Page 90: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

90

Rate LT INSTPrincipal Floating Rate Flexible Maturity inst

Sep08 2004 8.18 3

ABN AMRO Money Plus INST

Oct19 2005 8.18 4

HSBC Floating Rate LT INST

Nov082004 7.62 5

ICICI Floating Rate ICICI LT Floating Rate B

Sep 04 2004 7.60 6

Grindlays Floating Rate LT B

Jul 30 2004 7.39 7

Magnum Floating Rate LT INST

Jul14 2004 6.66 8

JM Liquid Plus Premium

0ct12 2004 6.34 9

Category(Debt: Floating Rate ST Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year Rank 1 yearLIC MF Floating Rate ST

Mar 29 2004 8.22 1

DBS Chola Floating Rate ST

Aug 8 2005 8.07 2

Reliance Floating Rate

Aug 27 2004 8.06 3

Can Floating Rate ST

Feb24 2005 7.99 4

Principal Floating RateShortMaturity

Sep 82004 7.94 5

Tata Floating Rate ST

Dec222003 7.70 6

Page 91: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

91

Templeton Floating Rate ST

Feb 02 2002 7.68 7

Magnum Insta Cas Liquid Floater

Aug 11 2005 7.68 8

HDFC Floating Rate ST

Jan 08 2003 7.64 9

Birla Floating Rate ST

Jun 042003 7.5 10

Category ( Debt: Medium Term )Scheme Name Launch Return 1

YearRank 1 year

Birla Sun Life Income Mar 03 1997

9.33 1

ABN AMRO Flexi Debt Regular Sep 03 2004 92 2ICICI Prudential Flexible Income Sep 02 2002 7.99 3SAHARA Income Feb 14 2002 7.98 4Kotak Flexi Debt Nov 29 2004 7.96 5Grindlays Dynamic Bond Jun 25 2005 7.86 6ICICI prudential Advisor Very cautious

Nov 28 2003 7.57 7

ICICI Prudential Long Term Mar28 2002 7.56 8Taurus Libra Bond Aug 18 2001 7.40 9Tata Dynamic Bond A Sep02 2003 7.17 10Grindlays SSI Medium Term Jun 27 2003 7.13 11

Category (Debt Medium term inst)Scheme Name Launch Return 1

YearRank 1 year

Principal Income inst May 13 7.12 1

Page 92: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

92

2003Tata Dynamic Bond B Sep 2 2003 7.07 2HSBC Income Inv Inst Sep 15 2003 6.15 3ICICI Prudential Income inst May 17

20035.86 4

Sundaram BNP Paribas bond saver inst

Aug 18 2003 5.63 5

ING vysya Incom inst Mar 10 2003 5.63 6

Category Debt short termScheme Name Launch Return 1

YearRank 1 year

Birla Sun Life Short Term April 19 2002

8.70 1

Tata Short Term Bond Aug 08 2002 8.35 2ING Vysya Income short Term Aug 16 2002 8.18 3Reliance Short Term Dec 17 2002 8.17 4HDFC HI Short Term Feb 06 2002 7.80 5ICICI Prudential Short Term Oct 19 2001 7.77 6DBS Chola Freedom Inc Short Term Mar 8 2002 7.74 7Sundaram BNP Paribas SD shortTerm

Aug 19 2002 7.69 8

Kotak Bond Short Term April 25 2002

7.69 9

JM SHORT TERM Jun 24 2002 7.64 10

Category Debt short term inst

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year

Rank One Year

ICICI Prudential Short Term inst Feb 24 2003 8.09 1

Grindlays SSI Short – Term Plan C April 01 2004

7.84 2

Templeton India Short –term Income Inst

Sep 06 2005 7.72 3

Page 93: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

93

DBS Chola Freedom Inc Short- term inst

April 10 2003

7.71 4

Birla Sun Life Liquid Plus Inst April 16 2003

7.54 5

Principal Income Short – Term Inst May13 2003 6.89 6DSPML Short- Term Sep04 2002 5.25 7Grindlays SSI short- term inst Feb25 2003 -3.75 8

Category debt: specialityScheme Name Launch Return

1YearRank1year

ICICI Prudential Blended Plan A May 18 2005

8.56 1

Kotak Equity Arbitrage Sep 25 2005 7.98 2Bench Mark Derivative Dec 14 2004 7.81 3ICICI Prudential Blended Plan B May 18

20057.13 4

Standard Chartered All Seasons Bond A

Aug 27 2004 6.98 5

JM Equity and Derivative Feb 21 2005 6.68 6Sundaram BNP Paribas Income Plus Jul 19 2002 5.84 7ING vysya Sselect Debt Aug 27 2004 4.17 8Franklin India International Dec20 2002 -6.68 9

Category Debt Ultra short termScheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearICICI Prudential Liquid Inst Mar27 2006 8.05 1DWS Money Plus Mar09 2006 8.02 2Templeton India MMA Mar17 1997 7.96 3LICMF Liquid Mar13 2002 7.88 4

Page 94: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

94

HDFC Cash Mgmt Saving Plus Retail Nov18 1999 7.87 5ICICI Prudential Sweep Cash Mar08 2006 7.84 6HDFC Cash Mgint Saving Nov18 1999 7.77 7TATA liquidity Managemant Mar01 2006 7.72 8ICICI Prudential Sweep Plan Feb28 2002 7.70 9HDFC Cash Mgint Call Feb06 2002 7.70 10

Category ultra short term Inst

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

ICICI Prudential Liquid Super Inst Nov17 2005 7.97 1Relince Liquidity Jun16 2005 7.93 2

ICICI Prudential Liquid Inst Plus Sep29 2003 7.80 3Birla Cash Plush Inst Premium Mar29 2004 7.78 4

Birla Sun Life Cash Manager Inst Apr16 2003 7.75 5

ICICI Prudential Liquid Inst Feb24 2003 7.74 6Templeton India TMA Super Inst Sep02 2005 7.73 7

Tata Liquid Super HI May20 2003 7.72 8HDFC Liquid Premium Plus Feb24 2003 7.72 9

ING Vysya Liquid Super Inst Aug02 2005 7.72 10

Category(Equity: Diversified)Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearICICI Prudential Services Industries Nov 18 ,2005 72.21 1JM Basic Jun 22,2005 71.42 2Standard Charterd Priemer Equity Sep26,2005 67.75 3DBS Chola Oppurtunities Dec 11 ,2003 62.00 4ICICI Prudential Infrastructure Aug 16, 2005 60.73 5ABN Amro Oppourtunities Mar 30, 2005 59.23 6Taurus Star Share Jan29 ,2004 58.27 7Fidelity Equity April 19,2005 57.88 8DSPML T.I.G.E.R.Reg May 25,2005 57.74 9ICICI Prudential Emerging Star Inst March 27,2006 53.93 15ICICI Prudential Emerging Star Oct5 ,2004 52.34 21ICICI Prudential Dynamic Oct 18 ,2002 49.22 36

Page 95: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

95

Category(Equity Auto

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

JM Aut0 Sector Jun9 ,2004 23.73 1

UTI Auto Sector April 7 ,2004 -0.29 2

Category(Equity Banking

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearReliance Banking May 22,2003 72.18 1

UTI Banking Sector April 7,2004 71.48 2

Category Equity FMCGScheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearICICI Prudential FMCG

March 30;1999 24.95 1

Franklin FMCG March 31;1999 9.14 2Magnum FMCG June 03;1999 2.08 3

Category Equity: Index

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearBanking BeES May 26; 2004 72.49 1

Nifty Junior BeES Feb 14; 2003 58.27 2

Nifty Benchmark ETS Dec 18;2001 44.20 3 UTI Sunder Jul 11; 2003 43.60 4

ICICI Prudencial Index Feb 25; 2002 43.46 5 UTI Nifty Index Mar04;2000 43.08 6

Franklin India Index NSE Nifty Jul 17; 2000 42.56 7 ICICI Prudencial SPIcE Jan 09; 2003 41.52 8

Page 96: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

96

UTI Master Index Jun 30; 1998 41.21 9 HDFC Index Nifty Jul 10; 2002 39.80 10

Category (Equity: Other Specality)Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1yearReliance Media And Entertainment Sep 27,2004 77.31 1Reliance Diversified Power Sector April 15, 2004 75.83 2UTI Petro June 26,1999 30.96 3Principal Global Oppourtunities March 19,2004 27.93 4

Category (Equity: Pharma)Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

Reliance Farma May 26, 2004 59.38 1JM Healthcare Sector Jun 09, 2004 33.67 2

Franklin Pharma March 31, 1999 30.81 3UTI Pharma Sector Jun 26, 1999 25.05 4

Magnum Pharma Jul 03, 1999 19.81 5

Category Equity Tax Plan

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

Principal Tax Savings Mar 31, 1996 55.26 1

Principal Personal Tax Saver Mar 31, 1996 54.96 2

Birla Sun Life Tax Relief ‘96 Mar 29, 1996 53.86 3

Kotak Tax Saver Oct 28, 2005 53.56 4

Fidelity Tax Advantage Jan 31, 2006 52.00 5

Canequity- Tax Saver Mar 31, 1993 48.28 6

Magnum Taxgain Mar 31, 1993 47.70 7

Birla Equity Plan Feb 13, 1999 46.93 8

ING Vysya Tax Savings Mar 12 ,2004 45.40 9

ICICI Prudencial Tax Plan Aug 09, 1999 22.67 24

Page 97: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

97

Category( Equity :Technology

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

DSPML Tecnology.com

Apr10, 2000 94.57 1

ICICI Prudential Tecnology

Jan 28, 2000 72.36 2

Magnum IT Jul 03, 1999 67.80 3

Birla Sun Life New Mellennium

Jan 15, 2000 61.19 4

UTI Software Jun 26, 1999 52.68 5

Kotak Tech Mar 21, 2000 41.46 6

Category Gilt Medium and Long Term

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

ICICI Prudential Gilt Investment

Aug 09, 1999 8.63 1

ICICI Prudential Gilt Investment PF

Nov 14,2003 8.53 2

RelianceGilt Long- Term

Jul 04,2003 7.48 3

RelianceGilt Long- Term PF

Mar 10,2004 7.48 4

BirlaGiltPlusRegular Oct 11,1999 7.39 5

DBS Chola Gilt Investment

7.09 6

Grindlays GSF PF Regular

Mar 17, 2004 7.08 7

Grindlays GSF PF Inst

Mar 17, 2004 6.99 8

Grindlays GSF Mar 01,2002 6.97 9

Page 98: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

98

Investment

Magnum Gilt Long Term PF

Nov 28,2003 6.80 10

Category Gilt Short Term

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

Birla Sun Life GSF Short-term

Oct 28, 1999 7.05 1

Birla Sun Life GSF Short-term

Oct 11, 1999 6.81 2

Magnu Gilt Short-term

Dec 22, 2000 6.73 3

TataGSF Short Maturity

Apr 08, 2003 6.72 4

Principal GSF Saving

Dec 09, 2003 6.29 5

UTI G-Sec Short-term

Jan 31, 2004 6.04 6

ICICI Prudential Gilt Treasury PF

Sep 23, 1999 5.97 7

DSPML GSF Shorter Duration

Aug 09, 1999 5.92 8

ICICI Prudential Gilt Treasury

Feb 11, 2002 5.72 9

Kotak Gilt Saving Dec 21, 1998 5.65 10

Category( Hybrid :Asset Allocation)

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year

Rank 1Year

DWS InvestmentOpportunity Jan 29, 2004

44.84 1

FT India Dynamic PE Ratio Oct 31, 26.80 2

Page 99: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

99

FoF 2003Magnum NRI Inv Flexi Asset Jan 13,

200417.35 3

UTI Variable Investment Nov 22, 2002

12.66 4

Category Hybrid Debt Oriented

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

Tata Young Citizens Oct 13, 1995 21.99 1

Canbalance Feb 01, 1998 21.03 2

Templeton India Pension Mar 31, 1997 20.91 3

Cancigo Apr 01, 2001 19.73 4

BirlaAssetAllocationConservative Jan 23, 2004 15.94 5

ICICIPrudentialAdvisorCautious Nov 28, 2003 15.87 6

LICMF- Children’s Oct 16 , 2001 15.20 7

Unit Linked Insurance Plan ‘71 Oct 01, 1997 15.09 8

Escorts Opportunities Feb 26, 2001 14.95 9

ICICI Prudencial Child Care- Study

Aug 06, 2001 14.68 10

Category Hybrid Equity Oriented

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year Rank 1 Year

Principal Child Benefit

Aug 01, 2001 46.80 1

Birla Sun Life ‘95 Feb 10, 1995 39.94 2

DSPML Balanced May 14, 1999 38.95 3

HDFC Prudence Jan 29, 1994 38.43 4

Tata Balanced Oct 07, 1995 37.69 5

Page 100: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

100

FT India Balanced Dec 10, 1999 37.65 6

Templeton India CAP Gift Plan

Sep 09, 2005 34.86 7

ICICI Prudencial Advisor-Aggressive

Nov 28 2003 33.51 8

LICMF ULIS Nov 10, 2003 32.22 9

JM Balanced Dec 22, 1994 32.02 10

Category Hybrid Monthly Income

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year

Rank1year

HSBC MIP Savings Feb13,2004 15.54 1DSPML Savings Plus Aggressive May25,2004 15.17 2

ABN AMRO MIP Sep03,2004 14.71 3

HDFC MIP Long Term Dec08,2003 14.49 4LICMF Floater MIP Plan A Oct08,2004 13.85 5

ICICI Prudencial Income Multiplier Reg Mar05,2004 13.62 6UTI MIS Advantage – Plan Dec16,2003 13.34 7

Birla Sun Life MIP Jul 14,1999 12.67 8FT India MIP Sep28,2000 12.46 9

LICMF MIP May15,1998 12.34C 10

Page 101: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

101

CLOSE ENDED

CATEGORY-Debt Medium Term

Scheme Name Launch Return 1Year Rank1year

Kotak Twin AdvantageSeries 2 May 12,2006

4.43 1

Category Debt :Speciality

Scheme Name Launch Return Rank1yearBirlaFMPQSeries 2 Aug 31, 2004 8.97 1Tata FHF Series 318 Month Plan G

Mar 23, 2006 8.76 2

FranklinTempleton FTF Series V- 13M

Mar 16, 2006 8.28 3

Tata FHF Series 318 Month Plan F

Feb 10, 2006 8.00 4

UTI Fixed Term Series I P18 Q4

Feb 28, 2006 7.96 5

HSBC Fixed Term Series 6

Feb 17, 2006 7.86 6

Birla FMP Annual Series 3

Nov 22, 2004 7.83 7

HDFC FMP 13M June 2006 Retail

Jun 12, 2006 7.69 8

HDFC FMP 13M June 2006 Inst.

Jun 12, 2006 7.69 9

Grindlays Fixed Maturity 7th Plan A

Feb 01, 2005 7.68

Category Equity Diversified

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year Rank 1 Year

ICICIPrudencial Fusion Inst 1

Feb 27 2006 49.58 1

ICICIPrudencial Fusion Feb 27 2006 47.52 2

Morgan Stanley Growth Jan 09 1994 40.6 3

FranklinIndiaSmallar Dec 2005 34.31 4

Page 102: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

102

Companies

HDFC Long Term Equity Jan 27 2006 29.41 5

Standerd Chareterd Enterprise Equity

May 16 2006 23.76 6

Category (Hybrid Debt Oriented )

Scheme Name Launch Return 1 Year Rank 1 year

FranklinTempletonFTF Series 2- 60M

Sep 8 2005 15.11 1

FranklinTempletonFTF Series 1- 60M

May 6 2005 14.68 2

Grindlays Fixed Maturity Plus 2 Plan A

Feb 10 2006 12.86 3

Franklin Templeton FTF Series 4- 60M

Feb 10 2006 12.63 4

Franklin Templeton FTF Series 3- 36M

Dec 8 2005 11. 83 5

Standerd Charterd Tristar Series 1 Plan A

Dec19 2005 11.18 6

Category(Hybrid Equity Oriented)

Scheme Name Launch Retun 1 Year Rank 1 Year

Benchmark Split Capital A

Jul 14, 2005 26.11 1

Benchmark Split Capital B

Jul 19, 2005 19.43 2

Page 103: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

103

Categort(Hybrid Debt Debt Oriented)Scheme Name Launch Return 1 year Rank 1 yearKotak Flexi FOF Oct 07, 2005 28.32 1Kotak Dynamic FOF Mar 22, 2005 18.07 2Kotak Flexi FOF Series 1 Mar 22,2006 11.39 3ABN AMRO Multi Manager Regular Apr 15, 2006 11.37 4

Category ( Equity: Tax PlanningScheme Name Launch Return 1 Year Rank

1 Year

Franklin India Taxshield ‘98 Mar 31, 1998 44.15 1UTI MEPUS Mar 31, 2003 40.94 2Birla Tax Plan ‘98 Mar 31, 1998 39.70 3Franklin India Taxshield ‘99 Mar 31 , 1999 36.47 4Sunderum BNP Paribas Taxsaver ‘98 Mar 31, 1998 30.65 5

THE TOP 50 SERVICE BRANDS THIS YEAR

Reliance Mutual Fund 28

SBI Mutual Fund 33

UTI Mutual Fund 39

Tata Mutual Fund 40

HDFC Mutual Fund 43

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund 46

A survey has been conducted by Economic Times in that survey ICICI Prudential has got the 46th position . In that ranking competitor of ICICI Prudential Ranked high. Reliance Mutual Fund is on the top .Funds of ICICI Prudential is doing very well in all category by improving after sale service it can become a marketLeader in the mutual fund Industry.To take the benefit of generating good return it will have to improve after sale service.

Page 104: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

104

INDIAs MOST TRUSTED BRANDS 2007

Reliance Mutual Fund 1

SBI Mutual Fund 2

UTI Mutual Fund 3

Tata Mutual Fund 4

HDFC Mutual Fund 5

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund 6

Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund 7

Birla Sunlife Mutual Fund 8

STANDARD Chartered AMC 9

Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund 10

In the survey conducted by Economic Times Reliance Mutual fund is the most trusted brand.ICICI Prudential got the sixth rank.ICICI Prudential will have to improve his services to win the trust of the people.It should work on customer relationship management strategy. It should try to differentiate his product with competitor to position himself as a most trusted brand.

Page 105: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

105

MARKET RANKING OF ICICI AND UTI

Reliance 13.85%

ICICI Pru 12.00%

UTI 10.07%

HDFC 7.04%

Templeton 7.04%

Birla 5.28%

SBI 5.20%

Standard Charterd 3.97%

Kotak Bank 3.86%

Tata 3.57%

HSBC 3.31%

DSPML 3.36%

PRINCIPAL 2.71%

LIC 2.56%

SUNDARAM 2.26%

In terms of market share also reliance is on top position.ICICI Prudential is on second position.There is a need of sincere effort to improve the market share.

No.1 Brand Awareness and Preference amongst MFs (TNS Brand Tracker)Source: TNS Brand Tracker for the period March 05- Feb 07 and TNS Brand Tracker Attribute Preference study for March 05 – Feb 07

Page 106: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

106

Current scenario of mutual funds in india

The funds industry has never had it better: Assets under management is on the rise. Asset owned by India’s mutual fund reached the Rs 4 trillion mark first time.The total assets under management of the mutual fund industry fetched at Rs 4,02035.88 crore, a growth of14.7% from the last month’sAUM of Rs3,50279.39 crore. the number of players looks set to, jump, products are being rolled out by the dozen At least a couple of them are expected to get going soon, now that they have secured the regulator's approval It is also true that several other players intend to start operations here.The new products like Real estate funds, gold exchange traded funds and capital protected scheme provide interesting investment opportunities.

.The Indian market obviously looks good to these companies, some of which are indeed big names internationally. In the backdrop are a host of small issues that the industry is now growing accustomed to.

At least one such issue stems from the fact that retail investors are taking to funds in a bigger way ,the Indian investors, who all along opted to put their savings in bank deposits rather than in shares, are at last becoming less risk averse.The increase in asset under management is partly a reflection of the rise in sensex, but there is no denying that MF inflows have also increased significantly. True, corporate inflows have contributed substantially as corporates, flush with funds, have turned MFs as a convenient avenue to park their short term surpluses.But households too have participated. The share of household savings going to MFs has increased from 1.2% in 2003-2004to 3.6%in 2005-2006, a trend that is likely to have continued in 2006-2007.There has been some revolutionary action has been taken by government for mutualfund industry. Blue chip Public sector companies like ONGC ,IOC Bhel SAIL siting on huge cash reserves will now have a new investment option . They will now be able to invest in mutual fund . Mutual fund industry also concurs with this view. They feel that move will boost the industry by bringing increased cash flows. The government is also set to libralise norms for mutual funds investing in overseas debt and equity instruments The individual cap of 200$ million for fund house for investment abroad is likely to be hiked. Another thing in grass root level is that awareness about various products is increasing amongst investors. This will provide enough business oppourtunities to asset management companies.

Page 107: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

107

Changing Trends

WE have seen the rapid growth in mutual fund industry due to increasing mutual fund aware ness, Private sector has grown significantly Private sector has grown with 47%against negative growth of 29%.Reliance mutual fund reported a21% growth in its AUM during may is on first position ICICI Prudential is on second position while uti is on third position.

Challenges For Mutual Fund Industry

Indian Mutual fund Industry is growing but it is still in its early stages of growth. Today with only 100 billion$ of AUMs, the industry still is minuscule in the context of the domestic savings,the us mutualfund industry is 100 times larger than that, of india , while the us GDP is only 13 times that of India.Also Brazil’s mutual fund industry is about four to five times that of Indian mutual fund industry, which reflects huge under penetration in India If we see the house hold financial assets 12% investment goes to Life insurance , 16%PF and pension,52%in cash deposits 16% in others investment avenue onle 3% belong to retail mutual fund. According a survey by economic times people still prefer to do their savings in physical assets.The Mutual fund industry still appears heavily reliant on on short term investments from corporates. At the end of May 2005,the industry- wide assets under management(AuM) were Rs. 1.68 lakh crore with 26% in growth schemes and 38% in liquid/ money market schemes . By May 2007 the AuM had grown to Rs 4.14lakh crore with the share of growth funds at 30% and liquid funds at 28% . However, a part of this relative gain in the share of growth schemes is clearly attributable to the rise in stock prices- over this period the sensex had gone up from 6,715 to 14,544 . Over this 24- month period the total AuM of growth schemes increased from Rs43,236crore to Rs 122,800 crore, but of this increase about Rs 50 ,000 crore came through fresh investments . If one were to adjust for the sharp appreciation in stock prices, the share of growth schemes is unlikely to have changed over this period. Interestingly the bulk of the inflow into growth schemes has come through new schemes . This exposes the industry ‘s inability to sell mutual funds as a concept to retail investors. It appears to have relied more upon investor ignorance. MFs have been sold and purchased as products analogous to equity offerings of companies.

Page 108: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

108

The Point is not that corporate money is bad or that liquid schemes should not be encouraged. The point is that only a small percentage of house hold savings goes into equities and

Debentures- 0.8 %of GDP and 4.9% of gross financial savings At the end of March 2006.If this share is to increase, to channel house hold savings in to capital market in order to distribute the gains of wealth creation more widely , then MFs would have to play a great role.In the US ,for instance 48% of house holds have exposures to MFs against about 5% of India . consequently,while 23.2% of house holds financial assetsare held in investment companies In India only 4%of financial assets in such investments,though up sharply from 0.4% in the previous year.

RECOMMENDATION

1. ICICI PRUDENTIAL should try and bring awareness in the people about mutual funds, this can be done through regular Canopy’s in places where people are in mass .

2. ICICI PRUDENTIAL should try to convince broker and consumer that Mutual Funds are governed by SEBI . There is no difference between private sector mutual fund and public sector mutual fund.Their rigts will be equally protected.

3. Company should organize training programmes to train sales people properly so that they deliver full and complete information about the product to the customer.EXAMPLE:Product like fixed maturityplan-Sales people do not know that how it is better than bank deposits

4. .Customer relationship management should be strengthened.There is a need to improve after sale service

5. An honest approach should be adopted to those customers who comes directly without any distrbution channel.Proper guidance should be given regarding redemption and switching

6. Systematic investment plan’s minimum amount should be reduced to attract recurring deposit customer. It will also increase peneteration.

7.

Page 109: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

109

CONCLUSION

A long road is ahead for Mutual Fund Industry.The industry is still minuscule in the context of domestic saving and in comparison of global standard.There is huge under penetration in India .but it is not a matter of disheartening for Mutual Fund Industry enough growth opportunities are available in the market.People are not very mutch satisfied with available conventional investment instrument.They have shown the keen interest in securities market. What is needed is that design the product according to need and want of the people.sales people showed lack of knowledge about the product.therefore Asset Management companies should build a competent workforce.Asset Management Companies should also try to organize training programme time to time to keep them update about product after sale service play a very important role in expanding the mutual fund market.Sales people should try to sell Mutual Fund as aconcept.if I talk by customer perspective long term approach should be adopted.If I talkBy the perspective of Asset Management companies they should not follow shortcut path to increase market share and asset under management.More Funds are coming through fixed maturiry plan and liquid plan. Asset Management Companies should try to attract more retail investor in equity related fund it will generate more management fee by that profit will accrue .if companies are able to generate more profit they will be able to launch innovative product.They can spend that surplus on improving after sale service and hiring competent workfore.One thing is very good about mutual fund industry is that security board exchange of India having a bird eye view on mutual fund industry it will be helpful in expanding the mutual fund market.

Page 110: Thesis Performance of Mutual Funds in India

110

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Economic Timeswww.amfiindia.comwww.valueresearchonline.comMoney TodayOutlook Moneywww.sebigov.inSites of various Asset Management companieswww.indiainfoline.comwww.google.co.inICICI Prudential Factsheet