15 March 2013

Tax Free Bond IPOs Extension

Safe investment with very attractive pre-tax return, mainly for tax payers in 30% bracket.
 
Extended till 18/03/2013 :
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CompanyInterest RatesPre-tax yield – 30% tax bracket
HUDCO7.69% for 15 years11.13%
REC7.54% for 15 years10.90%
IIFCL7.52% for 15 years10.88%
NHB7.32% for 10 years10.60%
 
Extended till 19/03/2013 :
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CompanyInterest RatesPre-tax yield – 30% tax bracket
Ennore Port7.67% for 15 years11.10%
PFC7.54% for 15 years10.90%
Dredging Corporation7.47% for 10 years10.82%
Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust7.32% for 10 years10.60%
 

Think twice before you take on new loans ::Business Line


You will agree that managing your liabilities is just as important as managing your investments. This week we discuss how you can avoid taking on more debt than you can comfortably manage. Specifically, we discuss measures that you should take before assuming large liabilities to moderate the stress such repayments can have on your cash flows.
Debt trap?
The largest liability during your working life is the mortgage on your dream house. Typically, this repayment will constitute 40 per cent of your monthly income. Your mortgage liability could increase over time if the general interest rate in the economy increases. This is because banks will typically offer you a floating rate loan on the amount borrowed.
Now, paying 40 per cent of your income every month to meet your liability gives you limited flexibility to improve your current lifestyle and also save for the future. This issue is important, especially if your family has two incomes. Why? A typical two-income family has more expenses than a comparable single-income family. By this we mean that a two-income family that has 4 members will typically have higher monthly expenses than a single-income family with 4 members. Moreover, a two-income family may take on a higher mortgage because it can afford to do so.
Higher liability and more lavish lifestyle may be a cause for concern, especially if there is threat of losing one income. This could happen due to various reasons including family circumstances and bad economic conditions. So, how should you moderate the stress of having to repay your liabilities when your family income reduces?
Stress-testing liability
If your family has two incomes, try to manage your monthly expenses including your liability repayments with single (higher) income! You can save the entire second income and build wealth for future consumption. The accumulated wealth can also be used to pay for liabilities if there is a loss of one income.
We realise that is easier said than done. After all, with two incomes comes the associated lifestyle and higher living expenses.
A more realistic alternative would be to manage your monthly living expenses including mortgage repayments with the higher income and not more than 50 per cent of the second income. Let us define this cash flow as the “available income” for monthly spending. If your family has single income, try to manage all your debt repayments within 40 per cent of your monthly income.
You should stress-test your available income before you assume a large liability.
This provides you a reality-check on whether you can sustain the liability repayments with minimal stress.
To do this, deposit the intended monthly repayments from your available income into a separate savings account for six months before you actually assume the liability. If you are able to comfortably make the deposits, you should assume the liability. Otherwise, consider scaling down your debt.
Emergency fund
It is important to stress-test your cash flow before you assume large liabilities. You should also include monthly debt repayments as part of your emergency fund.
If your family has two incomes, the emergency fund can be 6 times your monthly living expenses including the debt repayments. This multiplier can be 8 if your family has single income.
And remember this: you should control your non-discretionary expenses during normal times! Why?
During times of stress, you will have to anyway give up your discretionary expenses such as occasional fine dining and exotic vacations. So, when will you enjoy life’s luxuries? Importantly, do not sharply cut your discretionary expenses to buy a house that you cannot otherwise afford.
If it is a choice between occasional luxury and a larger house, choose luxury to enjoy life and reduce the stress on your cash flow.

Short-term gains or long-term change? ::Business Line


Dell, once a darling of the markets, is planning to get delisted and go private. The transaction is being spearheaded by none other than the founder Michael Dell, who has arranged financing from a private equity fund and put his own money at stake to buy-out public shareholders. Clearly the company is not in the pink of health lately and needs to transform itself in the age of mobility, but is the stock market missing something that Michael Dell knows?

INDUSTRY TRENDS

Successful companies too, falter once in a while — due to change in industry trends — and need to transform themselves to stay relevant, especially so in the field of technology. The case of Dell is just one of many such among tech giants which have experienced the same in the past. Many have transformed themselves successfully and continue to thrive — such as IBM, Apple, Microsoft. Some where the rot was too deep and the surgeries too late, have failed — Kodak. I am the sure the list can be extrapolated to non-tech industries as well — both globally and within India.
The good news is that in the technology sector, unlike others, there is a new wave of change that happens every few years. So, even if a company misses one wave, if it is able to latch on to the next; it could survive and thrive successfully. However, the key with surfing successfully from one wave to the next, as articulated by Prof Vijay Govindarajan of Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth in his famous three-box approach, is: a) Managing the present (short term) but identifying and accepting the need for change; b) selectively abandoning the past; c) Thinking about and investing in high probability bets for the future (long term). Of course, to do all this, the company needs to have a certain degree of split personality.

STRIKING DICHOTOMY

Here-in lays the dichotomy between the world of business and that of stock markets. While market analysts focus on Q-on-Q performance (that is, the short term), businesses need to think about the long term as well for their fundamental survival, and doing good on the former may not imply the latter. Long term is uncertain and requires investing in calculated bets, which may not pay off over the short term.
In fact, it is very often the case that such bets may dampen short-term performance for quite a while. But usually if the bets are made rationally (that is, keeping in mind the probabilities of success and failure, worst case scenario, core competence, and so on), even if few of the bets are right, the long-term rewards more than compensate for short-term losses in money and time.
Sometimes, there are large changes that occur in the industry that require large-scale transformation by companies, for example, global sourcing, e-commerce, mobility, and so on. These are akin to changing the course of the ship midway — which are especially risky — the larger the ship. Sometimes slowing-down the throttle over the short term to do a manoeuvre for the long term is the best way for a safe journey — lest one may end up like the Titanic.
A business that is obsessed with consistent quarterly performance either becomes too afraid to take the risks required for the long term or is afraid to slow down for course correction. Both are ingredients to perish with consistency.

LEAD INDICATORS

Unfortunately, markets and analysts seem to be more focussed on financial numbers for the current/next quarter/year that are mere lag indicators of seeds sown and risks taken in the past. This results in early write-off and late appreciation of good companies, when they are navigating waves in the ocean of commerce.
What is critical are the lead indicators — that is, what is the company doing to ensure that it thrives over the long term — for example, what are the changes being undertaken internally? What are the trends that the company is betting on? How many new initiatives are ongoing? How much has the company invested in new products/services/markets/channels? How many of these have displayed initial success? What is the probability of break-through success (ROI) over the next five yrs/10 yrs?
The lack of patience to observe the lead indicators and wait for them to pay-off in financial terms, results in stock prices of once successful companies falling off a cliff from time to time. This often leads to listed companies focusing most of their energies in dressing up the quarterly performance, while making half-hearted attempts to transform themselves until it is too late.
Of late, promoters/private equity investors across the world, who seem to have a relatively more long-term mindset, are taking advantage of this situation by taking companies private. The company can be bought at a lower price from existing shareholders, thanks to the street’s disenchantment with their recent lacklustre performance. It is also easier to focus on making the transformation work, away from the limelight (and grilling) of quarterly analyst conferences.

LESSONS FROM HISTORY

History has proven that really great companies have had the ability to navigate change and come back to surpass their past glory. Investors who stuck by these companies were rewarded handsomely for their patience. Examples of such companies include IBM — which made a transition from hardware to software under Lou Gerstner — and Apple — which made a transition from a marginal player in PCs to a leader in music, smart phones under Steve Jobs.
There are many examples in our own backyard. For example, Bajaj — that made the transition from scooters to bikes; or ICICI — which made a transition from project finance to retail banking; Wipro – that went from vegetable oils to software; or more recently, GSK Consumer — that injected new energy into its ageing Horlicks brand.
Can one extend a similar argument to the case of Infosys which was once the darling of the markets but has been reporting below industry performance over the last couple of years? Going by the strong DNA of the company, the fact that it seems to be aware of its problems and that it is doing something about it (example, Infosys’ 3.0 strategy) makes it hard to write off a possible bounce back to the top.
A potential signal which indicates that a company is dead-serious about transforming itself is when there is leadership change, especially if it involves a passive promoter/founder taking on a more active role, as with Michael Dell in his current avatar or Steve Jobs when he came back to Apple for the second stint. A couple of Indian companies where founders have recently taken more active roles are Geometric and Nucleus Software. Is it a sign of bigger things to come at these firms? Let me leave you with that thought.

Leave real estate to your heirs ::Business Line


I am 35 years old and my monthly income is Rs 1.45 lakh. My wife is currently working but will resign shortly. We have a 4-year-old son and are expecting our second child this year. Our monthly household expenses are Rs 30,000. The EMI payment towards loans taken for flat and plot is Rs 27,050 and will be repaid in 8 years.
I have a flat worth Rs 40 lakh and also a few plots worth Rs 1 crore. I am planning to construct a house in any one of these plots and would rent it out for Rs 13,000.
My PF accumulation is Rs 18 lakh. Our PPF balance is Rs 3.5 lakh.
I have invested in a few ULIPs, for which I pay an annual premium of Rs 54,000. I have invested Rs 30 lakh in debt schemes and MIPs and Rs 14 lakh in equity funds. I shuffle my funds based on the market conditions by varying the allocation to equity and debt.
My investments in fixed deposits and NCDs are worth Rs 6 lakh. I have taken a term insurance policy and also have group term cover for Rs 50 lakh.
We have health cover for Rs 5 lakh and that includes my parents.
My goals:
For my children’s school education and higher studies I need Rs 15 lakh and Rs 10 lakh each respectively.
For their marriage I may need Rs 20 lakh each, in present value. Is it wise to sell the plots to meet the children’s education and marriage needs?
Based on my financial strength, what would be the appropriate age for me to retire?
— Ram