FundsIndia.com Review


wealthymatters

I came across FundsIndia a couple of months ago,via their extensive ads on Indian financial blogs.A bit of asking and I found out that they were mutual fund distributors.At the time I was like ho-hum,they are another of the lakhs of mutual fund distributors/agents around,perhaps a bit bigger than many others but probably no worse and maybe even better than many.

Personally I am bargain-minded ,so spartan servicing works for me.Also I tend to invest for the long term and small amounts compounded over the long term cause sizable differences in returns ;so I am fanatic about expenses.So direct investments in mutual funds are my thing-Link.So I knew I was never going to use their services to buy mutual funds.But I considered them as perhaps being useful for people who like to indulge in full service and are willing to pay for it.I even considered carrying their ad on wealthymatters. Read more of this post

NHB Tax-Free Bonds


wealthymatters

The NHB tax-free bonds offering 9.01% for 20 years is a great deal.Going by the status today afternoon round 3,there might not be much scope for anybody to ensure subscription tomorrow.Sorry for the late post.But do try your luck,its worth a little bit of effort to secure an allotment.

Sales Nous From Oliver Emberton


wealthymattersA while back I posted advice from Oliver Emberton :Here

Today,there’s a piece from him on sales.Do read.

When I first started a business, I was 21, bald, and had the social confidence of an asthmatic field mouse.

Fortunately I started my business with an ultra-confident Sales Director, who unfortunately turned out to be both hopeless and completely mental. He punched me in the face during our second board meeting.

At one of our first pitches to a prospective client he bragged how he “wasn’t much of a techie” and “didn’t know how to use email”. These were not inspiring words from a cutting edge web design company. Read more of this post

The Hazards Of Betting On Political Developments


As the financial media creates a buzz about positioning your portfolio in anticipation of election results,here’s some history to recollect:

In May 2004, the Indian stock market shut on panic that a coalition government supported by the Left will ruin India with little economic reforms. On May 17, the Sensex fell 11% when everyone rushed to the exit door. What followed in the next three-and-a-half years, in the run-up to the global credit crisis of 2008, was that Indian stocks had their best run. Between May 2004 and December 2007, it returned 321%. To be sure, there wasn’t much economic reforms under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the period to write home about, but still the markets rallied as did most other asset classes across the world.

In May 2009, the Sensex rose to limit and was again shut, because everyone was scrambling to get their toe into the most exciting reform bus that Manmohan Singh was set to drive. Between then and now, it is up 17%, a far cry from the performance when fear engulfed about political outcomes. It is a fact that the Singh’s reform bus hardly departed from the station.

Facts show that market returns are unrelated to what investors believe to be the political outcome. Factors beyond political leaders have influenced returns. With nothing much to look forward to in the corporate world, or economic policy making, investors and financial advisers are spending time on guessing, on what the next general election could throw up.

 

The Emperor Has No Clothes!


wealthymattersWhen you sell a stock,” I asked, “who buys it”? He answered with a wave in the vague direction of the window, indicating that he expected the buyer to be someone else very much like him. That was odd: what made one person buy and the other sell? What did the sellers think they knew that the buyers did not? Since then, my questions about the stock market have hardened into a larger puzzle: a major industry appears to be built largely on an illusion of skill. — Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Laureate.

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