Mutual funds try to 'switch' off direct plans
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Impose steep exit loads on
existing investors moving to direct plans, whereas moving from a direct plan
to a distributor-supported plan attracts no such fee
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Millions of mutual fund investors are being discouraged from
opting for investments through a direct plan, which will take effect tomorrow,
as fund companies have imposed steep charges on moving from existing plans to
the new direct plans.
These charges are in the form of exit load, which the funds
have said they will charge, if the investors want to “switch” their existing
investments to the direct plan. Incidentally, many funds had raised their exit
loads in the run-up to the move to as high as three per cent for exits made
within six months and so on. Some investors say these “exit loads” are against
the spirit of the move by the Securities and Exchange Board of India ( Sebi)
as there is no actual exit. Further, there was no direction about charges for
switching from the existing plan to direct plan in the Sebi documents.
AN INDIRECT STRIKE
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|
RECENT SPIKES IN EXIT LOADS
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||
Revised charges
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Earlier charges
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Up to 180 days
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3%
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1%
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181-360 days
|
2%
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1%
|
361-540 days
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1%
|
Nil
|
Above 540 days
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Nil
|
Nil
|
Source: Valueresearchonline.com
Based on changes made by some AMCs post-October |
Dhruv Mehta, head of an eponymous advisory firm and
president of Federation of Independent Financial Advisors (Fifa) said Sebi
circulars are silent on the aspect of exit loads. “Each fund house is taking
its own call. I don’t think there was any Sebi directive on charges for
switching to the direct plan,” Mehta said.
In August, Sebi decided in its board meet that funds will
introduce low-cost direct plans, which will not impose marketing and selling
charges on the investor. The memorandum submitted by the mutual fund advisory
committee and approved in the board meeting on August 17, says, “To incentivise
direct investments, there should be a separate plan for direct investments,
that is, not through any distributor, with a lower expense ratio and no commission
to be paid from those plans.”
Devendra Nevgi, founder, Delta Global Partners, said, “If
the direct plans are the future of the industry, as Sebi wants it to be, there
should be unhindered entry for investors. Not only exit loads, there should not
be any cost. If the access is not unhindered, then Sebi has to come into play.”
Some funds have even said switches from existing
(distributor-supported) plans to direct plans will attract exit loads, whereas
the reverse – switch from direct plan to existing plan will not attract such
charges.
“How can one be considered an exit and the other not? Thus,
it is very clear that whose interest the fund companies are aligned to. They
want to protect the distributor at the expense of the investor,” said a
Mumbai-based mutual fund investor.
Sanjay Sinha, founder of Citrus Advisors, said, “Fund houses
might have incurred upfront charges on (acquiring) the assets, which they may
be charging as exit loads now.”
Though under the new rules, the amount charged as exit load
is credited to the scheme thereby benefitting the remaining shareholders, it
acts as a deterrent for the investor planning to go direct. Further, even the
exact saving on the direct plan is uncertain.
Sinha of Citrus Advisors said, “Fund houses have not given
the expense ratio differentials between the direct plan and the existing plan
in the addendums. So, it is not very clear what will be the impact on returns.
Only after the people see the differentials, they may take a decision on moving
to the direct plan.”
According to Sinha, if in the meantime, advisors play an
active role in helping investors select the right schemes, they might be able
to retain investors.
However, it is better for the investor to move to the direct
plan in the long run, said advisors. Mehta said, “The move will benefit a small
section of investors which believes in doing things on its own.”
Mehta added that distributors have their apprehensions.
“But, now that the plan is here, they have to try and cope. Investors who are
using advisors will continue to need those services.”
Source: BS
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