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Friday, January 15, 2010

Financial Planning & Mutual Funds

Have you ever wondered about the opportunities offered by this class of assets. A Mutual Fund Portfolio comes with Equity, Debt and their various combinations in the Long Term or short Term across different sectors of the economy depending upon the Investemt Objective.

Now have alook at how a youg man is planning:

  1. Emergecy Planning: Money Market Mutual Funds
  2. Short Term Needs upto 3 months: Liquid funds
  3. Asset Acquisition Planning: upto 3 years-Equity or debt Funds; 3-7 years-Equity or Debt Funds; above 7 years- equity Funds(pl remember to switch to stable debt funds as you near the target time horizon)
  4. Other Life Needs Planning: This deals mainly with planning for your Higher studies & marriage, Your Children's Education & their Marriage or Profession, World Tour etc.. You can use the same products as in Item 3 above.
  5. Protection Planning: The SIPs with Insurance help you here
  6. Retirement Planning: Exclusive Funds are available from UTI and Templeton ; Otherwise use any good diversified equity fund
  7. Tax Planning: ELSS or SIPs with Insurance that have the tax savng feature
  8. Estate Planning: use Nomination irrespective of the scheme.

The risk-return profile attached with each asset class and its various shades being different, you may need professionla expertise to select what is suitable for you.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Estate Planning

Estate Planning is all about making sure during your lifetime who is going to deal with what assets of yours after you are no more. You also pan for expenses related to death, burial and after death procedures and rituals.

Pandit J Nehru wanted his ashes to be spread across India. Mr. Dhirubai Ambani who created Reliance empire worth Rs 75000 crores (2002)from Rs 15000(1973) did not reveal his Will made the children fight in public for quite a long time. On death of Priyamvada Birla, The Will produced by Lodhas (2004) shook the Birlas by surprise.

Do not go with the impression that Estate Planning is only for the wealthy and not for common man. Read the days newspaper and you wil have upteen stories of heirs fighting over deceased person's properties big or small often landing into murder, long hospitalisation with or without court cases and estranged relationships. Quite often ladies are on the receiving end of all negative impacts. so it is in the best interest of the society to have the tradition of estate planning for all.

If you read old testament, you will find the father blesses the children and give assets to them before death.

What are the tools available for estate planning?

1. Nomination - Investments, Bank Accounts, etc
2. Trusts - Create a legal entity which will pursue your interests and use the assets for that purposes only
3. Power of Attorney - Engage somebody to execute your purposes during your life time, in case you become invalid
4. WILL - write a will appropriately witnessed and registered keep it safe custody; The executor will get it probated after your death and administer the assets as directed in the Will.
5. Insurane Policies - policy cannot be attached if it was acquired under the Married Women’s Property Act 1874 or if it is legally assigned in favour of someone.
6. Gifts - during your lifetime itself distribute gifts : Gifts attract gift tax if value is Rs50,000 or above, though you know for sure who got waht assets.
7. HUF - In the case of an HUF, the assets belong to members collectively

What should be the contents of the Will?

A will is a written, and legally enforceable expression or declaration of a person’s wishes concerning the disposition of his or her property on death.



  1. Introductory clause
    Identity of testator is revealed here
  2. Direction of payments
    Expenses met from the estate are clearly mentioned
  3. Disposition
    The treatment of Personal assets,Passing of money to specific persons/charity and the
    Residual assets are dealt with
  4. Appointment clause
    Executants of the Will, Trustees, appointment of guardians to minors are spelt out
  5. Tax clause
  6. Simultaneous death clause
  7. Execution and attestation clause
  8. Witness clause

The Will may be registered at the Registrar/Sub Registrar office and the testator can get copy during the life time and others after his life time.

It is not mandatory that a WILL is registered.

After the death of the testator, the Will is got probated by the Executor. If the Will which is required to be probated, under the Act, if not probated, has no legal sanctity and binding force.
Principal Court of Original Jurisdiction as per the local City Civil Court Act is the place where one has to get it probated. The High Court also enjoys concurrent jurisdiction to grant probate of the Will.


According to Section 222 of the Indian Succession Act, 1926, Probate shall be granted only to an Executor appointed by the Will. The appointment may be expressed or by necessary implication. In the absence of the Executor being named in the Will, the Legatees or the Beneficiaries under the Will could also seek probate of the Will.

  • According to Section 2 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, Probate means "the copy of a Will certified under the seal of a court of competent jurisdiction with a grant of administration of the estate of the testator". It is nothing but a decree passed by a competent court declaring the legality/correctness and genuineness of the Will of the deceased.
  • Under Section 219 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, if the deceased has died intestate and was not a person belonging to any of the classes referred to in Section 218 (i.e, Hindu, Mohammedan, Buddhist, Sikh or Jaina or an exempted person), those who are connected with him either by marriage or by consanguinity are entitled to obtain Letters of Administration of his estate and effects in the order and according to the rules framed in this section.
  • Under Section 212(2) of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, Hindus, Muslims, etc. are not bound to apply for letters of administration (Probate). It is optional and not mandatory for these persons to seek probate of the Will.
  • Probate of a Will when granted, establishes the genuineness of Will from the death of the testator and renders valid all intermediate acts of the Executor as such

When to Probate?


There is no limitation for grant of letters of administration or probate. Where the estate is in the possession of administrator there is no question of the Probate Court delivering the possession to him but the probate will be decisive only with regard to the genuineness of the Will propounded and the right of the executor to represent the estate.

Documents Required for Probating the WILL


(a)Original Will of the deceased.
(b) Title Deeds pertaining to the immovable property mentioned in the Will, if any.
(c)Documents pertaining to the movables, mentioned in the Will, if any.

Procedure

A petition has to be filed before the Principal Court of Original Jurisdiction or before the Hon'ble High Court under Section 374 of the Indian Succession Act. The Court in question will issue the court notices at the initial stage and a paper publication will be caused besides a Gazette publication as well. In case such a petition is contested, it will be converted into a regular suit and upon contest the same will be disposed off, by delivering the judgment and decree, in accordance with law


Taxes on Estate?

  • Estate duty was introduced in 1953 and was abolished way back in 1985, when V P Singh was the finance minister. It is not payable on deaths occurring after March 16, 1985.
  • Data collated for 2005 by PricewaterhouseCoopers for 50 countries shows Japan with a top rate of 70%. South Korea’s rate is 50% followed by the US (46%), and France and UK with 40% each. On the other hand, many countries, including India, do not levy estate tax. According to the PwC study, the 24 countries with no estate tax include China, Russia, Australia and Malaysia.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Saving through Protection Plans

First of all, let me put What insurance is :
•“insurance” refers to a financial service that uses risk-pooling to provide compensation to individuals or groups that are adversely affected by a specified risk or event.
•Risk-pooling involves collecting large groups (or pools) of individuals or groups to share the losses resulting from the occurrence of a risky event.
•Persons affected by a negative event benefit from the contributions of the many others that are not affected and, as a result, they receive compensation that is greater than the amount they have invested in the insurance policy.
Thus, products that allow an affected individual to receive only up to the amount they have contributed are considered as savings products, not insurance.

Basic principles that should be observed by insurance providers are universal to insurance and risk management. They include:
1.Similar units are exposed to risk. Insurers require that risks in a particular class or group of policies be similar. Insurers also require that the group insured (or the "risk pool") includes a large number of these similar risks, relative to the total population. Large numbers of policyholders reduce the potential for adverse selection (a situation where claims are higher than expected because only high-risk households purchase the insurance) and increase the likelihood that the variance of actual claims will be closer to the expected mean used in calculating premiums.
2.There is limited policy holder control over the insured event. Insurance protection cannot be offered if policyholders can control whether an insured event will occur. Selling an insured truck and claiming it as stolen; setting fire to an old, insured home to build a new one with the insurance settlement; and failing to properly care for an insured goat thereby increasing the chance it will die of disease—all of these behaviors (called “moral hazards”) take advantage of the insurer by increasing their claims experience above expectations.
3.Insurable interest exists. Insurance cannot be provided to policyholders who have a vested interest in a loss occurring. A property insurance policy, for example, on a home cannot be sold to anyone other than the residents of the home.
4.Losses are determinable and measurable. Insurance providers must have a mechanism for verifying the occurrence of a loss and identifying its cause and value.
5.Losses should not be catastrophic. The risk-pooling mechanism of insurance breaks down against risks that cause large losses for a substantial portion of the risk pool at the same time.
6.Chance of loss can be calculated. Setting insurance premiums requires estimating the size of expected losses and the chance of loss.
7.Premiums are economically affordable. In general, for an insurance policy to be an attractive purchase, the cost of premiums must be substantially less than the benefit offered by the policy.
Source: Warren Brown and Craig F. Churchill, Insurance Provision in Low-Income Communities, Part II, Initial Lessons from Micro-Insurance Experiments for the Poor (Bethesda, Md., USA: DAI, 2000).
Terminologies:
The Concise Oxford Dictionary brings out the subtle difference between the two terms 'Assurance '& 'Insurance'. Assurance refers to those insurance policies which guarantee payment on death of the person whose life is insured or on expiry of the prescribed period, whereas insurance refers to those policies where payment would be made only in the prescribed circumstances — death or accident happening within a specified period.
You have heard of Bancussurance?
Banks sell the same Insurance products to you & they take their Commission from the insurance company. As a customer you have the satisfaction of not taking trouble to find out another agent who will give you protection product.
Types of Insurance Plans
Broadly, the products offered by different compnaies can be grouped into Term Insurance and Endowment Plans.

Under the Term Insurance, a lump sum amount is paid to the nominee on the death of the insured. The amount is paid if and only if death occurs and not other-wise. If the insured survives the plan period, nothing is payable. Whole life insurance plans are Term Insurance for the Longest Term;

Under the Endowment Plan, accumulated savings amount is given to the nominee in addition the lumpsum amount payable.

Obviously the premiums will be high for Endowment plans. The premium you paid or the Value of the Fund Accumulated get deducted for the following charges among others depending upon the product and the provider:
1. Premium allocation charge:
2. Policy administration Charges :
3. Fund Management Charges:
4. Guarantee charges:
5. Switching Charges:
6. Surrender Charges:
7. Partial withdrawal charges
8. Mortality charges
9. Miscellaneous charges


One will find numerous ULIP products with differing terms and Endowments now a days. A large part of a ULIP `premium' is divided into units and invested in equities and debt instruments, the mix varying according to each policy-holders' risk appetite. The units are akin to mutual fund units and the investor can redeem them at maturity at net asset value. However, since the maturity date is predetermined, ULIP act more like a closed-ended fund. And it was directly positioned in the market place against Mutual Funds upto 2009.

IRDA had capped the difference between gross and net yield to customers at 3 per cent for 10-year policies and at 2.25 per cent for policies of more than 10 years, effective from 1 October 2009.

That being the case for Insurance, what rate of return is possible from such hybrids of protection and investments?
In any case, long term endowment plans offer some thing similar to the yield on Long Term Zero Coupon GOI Bonds. ULIPs may offer good rate of return in an year of growth in the Capital Market ; but then you must be willing to shoulder it when the market goes down as well.

Sweeteners are avilable in terms of tax savings under Section 80 C of IT Act 1961.

Middle class may look at the ULIPs from Mutual Funds which charges relatively low premiums. BPL families get covered Rs30,000 under Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana as per GOI budget 2008-2009. However, BPL and Lower middle class may look at Endowment policies. ULIPS are for the knowledgable and Risk savvy of any income class. For HNI, it is better to have Term Plans for Insurance and other products for Investments.

Always remember that savings are different investments are different, although we use them in daily life interchangably. Savings is out of thrift. But investment is essentially about surplus being deferred for future consumption.

Why should you compare Insurance Companies?

The following considerations should be kept in mind before choosing a Insurance Company.
· The background of the promoters and its joint venture partners.
· Number of years into Insurance.
· How good is the company in claim settlement.
· Service and friendly work force.
· Use of technology.

Why should you compare the Products from different companies?

· You can choose the best suited product according to your own needs.
· Chances are that you get the best pricing for the product you choose which can bring down your cost.
· By comparing offers from different companies you insure that you have not bought a inferior product from the market place.
· You get a clear idea of past performance such as bonus declared or returns given in case of Unit Linked Plans (ULIP's).

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Retirement Planning

When you get your first pay cheque, is the time to start saving for your Retired Life. The Retirement may be so long like after 35 years or so.. quite long a time frame available for you to save as small as Rs 50 per month. That is how you make the power of compounding work for you.
Trdationally Rent earning real estate like houses or shops rented out or Income earning plantations, the Pension from defined benefit plans and some Gold did the trick for us. Changing labour profile, Size of Population, changing Income avenues all have put pressure on the ways people save for their golden days.

People in Merchant Navy, NRIs etc.. retire as early as 35 years. In this case, the length of retired life may be as big as 45-50 years. The hard earned money is spent on new ventures that quite often blast before gestation period.

With caution and care one has to develop a retirement plan that can help one save regularly and within his means. This must be separated from what you save for starting a business venture / building a house for Primary residence/ Child's marriage/Child's education etc...

What avenues are avialble for you today to save for your retirement that turns in another 30-35 years?


1. The Employees Provident Fund (Defined Benefit Plan/defined Contribution plan)
2. The New Pension Scheme (Defined Contribution plan)
2. Other Opportunities
2.a. Equities
2.b. Mutual Funds
2.c. Insuarnce

If Retirement turns in 15 years and above?

1. Public Provident Fund
2. Post office Schemes with RD or Reninvestment facilities
3. Rolling NSC investments
4. Of course all the above roads of first category are open, but more caution required as time frame has reduced.

If Retirement figures up 5 years or less?

1. Bank Fixed Deposits
2. Company Fixed Deposits /Debentures
3. Debt Mutual Funds
4. Post Office MIPs
5. NSCs
6. RBI Relief Bonds
7. Kisan Vikas Patras


Definitely you can save through the routes mentioned at both of the above categories are also avilable. Some of them have risk-return profile that leave you in deep trouble. MIP holders felt it in 2001 when many did not get the face value back, if not any return on the investment. Equity holders felt it in 1998, 2001, 2003 and in 2008 when the asset value depreciated heavily.

You will agree that time frame reduction also reduces the eraning capability of these instruments of savings and therefore one needs to save very large amounts to cater to same needs as compared to taht of longer term instruments.

Once you are above 60, you have Reverse Mortage also an option to fall upon. Reverse mortgage is a financial product that enables senior citizens to mortgage their property with a lender and convert part of the home equity into tax-free income even while retaining the house. Budget 2008-2009 clarified that reverse mortgage is not "transfer" and the receipts are not income in the hands of Senior Citizens. Section 10(43) exempts any loan received by an individual, whether lumpsum or in instalments, in a transaction of reverse mortgage, if it conforms to the scheme notified by the Central Government. Section 80 E of IT Act 1961 provided exemption of income upto Rs 20,000 w r t Senior Citizens. Here senior Citizens are of age above 65 years for IT purposes.

Another avenue is the Senior Citizen's Scheme where you can deposit upto 15 lakhs in an account and get annuities @9%pa.

Once you are retired, how do you go about asset allocation?

Better to be safe with 1/3-1/3-1/3 mode. That is to say that you allocate 1/3 in Dividend yielding Equities, Mutual Funds and managed Portfolios another 1/3 in Fixed Income Earning Debt Mutual Funds and other flexible earning debt assets and remaining in fixed earning Fixed assets. Depending on where you stand in the age profile and your own risk -disposition and personal income needs these ratios will change suitably.

But the most crucial thing in a Retirement Planning is to decide how much money is required at the time of retirement to keep you going say for next 30-35 years.

1. Annual Replacement Income
50% of your Income at Retirement is considered to be adequate to cover the retired annual expenses. So create a fund that has present value of annuity stream of 50% of Retirement age Income net of personal expenses and taxes.
2. Need Based Approach
Project the Retirement Income /Expense Needs based on

Inflation rate (3.5% to 4% is considered good )
Tax rate, both current and future
Retirement age
Expected return on investments
Replacement ratio (as above)
Life expectancy
Health conditions (requirement for long term care, personal assistant etc..)


Once the size of fund to be available at Retirement to keep you going for next 30-35 years is known, you have to work out a plan that is suitable for you given the length of work life. It will detail what instruments to save in, at what frequency , in what amounts and from what kind of issuers.

Another route available is to use Provisions of The Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act,2007. You can approach the Tribunal in your State through the District Welfare Officer not necessarily through an Advocate. Maximum Rs 10,000 pm can be obtained from the unwilling children! But will you have the energies to fight during these golden days?

Better to start early and take professional help here because it is intermingled with Asset Procurement planning, Tax planning and Protection planning

Protection Planning

How do one go about Protection planning?

I tried to look at the websites of several Insurance comopanies providing Protection Solutions and found out that every one is giving a window for punching the age and Sum Assured so that I know how much premium I have to pay. But how do I figure out the magical number of that Sum Assured?

First let me take you to Life Insurance :

My search ended up in creating this message board for you. There are 3 prominent ways in which Sum Assured can be calculated.

1. The traditional Rule of Thumb/Income Replacement method

According to this method, one takes a Sum Assured as certain multiple of current annual income.
If your annual income is Rs 15 lakhs, you take 6-8 times of that as Sum Assured. A variationof this is to change the multiple As & When you change life stages. Try this:


Life Stage in Age(yrs) - Summ Assured
20-30 years - 5-10 times Current annual Income
30-40 years - 15-20 ''
40-50 years - 10-15 ''
50-60 years - 5-10 times ''

2. Human Life Value(HLV)


HLV is defined as the present value of all future income that you could expect to earn for your family's benefit. It also includes other value you expect to contribute, less personal expenses, life insurance premiums and taxes through your planned retirement date


•Raja is 40 years old and plans to retire at 60. His current salary is Rs 3 lakhs and is expected to remain same every year. His personal expenses, life insurance premiums that he pays and taxes are around Rs 1.25 lakhs. His contribution to his family is rest of his salary of around Rs 1.75 lakhs.
•Gross Total Income: Rs 3 lakhs
•Less Self - Maintenance Charges: Rs 1 lakh
•Tax Payable: Rs 10,000
•Life Insurance Premium: Rs 15,000
•Surplus Income Generated for Family: Rs1.75 lakhs
•If this surplus income is capitalised at a discount rate (expected return rate) of 7 per cent per annum for 20 years, then the HLV will be = Rs 175,000*10.6 = Rs 18.55 lakhs.

3. The Need Based approach

1. Lump sum needs on Life to be Insured's death
You will items like
a. Home loan payoff
b. Car loan payoff
c. Child's education
d. Child's marriage
e. Emergency fund post death etc..
2. Monthly income needs
try to assess
a. Monthly expenses
b. Income of Living spouse in case she earns, or rent or interest
c. Shortfall = (a-b)
d. Monthly income needs till child turns 21 or is self-sufficient:
e. Number of years to go: For the child to reach 21 and post that for the spouse till her age of 80 or 90 years
f. Annual income needs: Of spouse, children or dependents
g. Total income needs: Of spouse, children or dependents
3. Sum up the current invested assets and current life insurance cover.

Now see how much (3) total differs by what you have calculated above (1) and (2). This will be the shortfall (considering that you die today) that you will need to get covered. But do note that invested assets exclude residence, car and other personal assets

Today most of the Financial Planners advice either the second or third one. The Salaried class may like to go by HLV when the Business Class prefer the third one as the income fluctuate more in the case of the latter.

You can avail Tax exemption under Sec 80 C of IT Act 1961 on premium paid on the policy in your name/spouse/children subject to overall limit of Rs 100000 and the individual limit of 20% on Sum Assured per policy.

The monies received by the nominee are not treated as income for tax purposes. This makes it convenient for Estate Planning.

Now let us look at Health Insurance:

National Programm on Women & Aging, USA prescribes less than 20% of disposable income after all other bills are paid as an indicative premium for an income bracket of $200000- $1.5million. GOI has not given any such directive so far.

But you get exemption under Sec 80 D. This may be a guiding post for you to start:
Union Budget 2008-09 has expanded the scope of this section by increasing the limit. Now, a person can get an additional benefit of Rs 15,000 for self, spouse, children and dependent parents. Thus, a total tax relief of Rs 30,000 is now possible now. Also, if any of the two parents are above the age of 65 years, the deduction goes up to Rs 20,000. It is not necessary that the parents should be dependent on the taxpayer. It is important to remember though that the payments for the policies should be made by cheques and not in cash or by credit card.

What about Property Insurance:

You will obviously buy Vehicle Insurance because the laws are stringent. what about other asssets? the moment you posses an asset, there is a risk attached to it. How much of it you want to protect is left to the risk disposition of the owner.

Detailed assessment procedures are available with the Insurance companies.


Next step is to study the offer from the Insurance Provider as to hidden charges and premiums for same Sum Assured.