Wednesday, 24 May 2017

Secrets of Wealth Creation .... Know more from me ....!!

Secrets of Wealth Creation .... Know more from me ....!!

I am sure that there are some secrets that wealthy people know and others don't know. Of late, I have been carefully studying people around me in day today life whom I really consider wealthy. Sharing with you my small understanding on wealth creation ........

We don’t need to be lucky to become wealthy. However this is a paradox that there are people who are wealthy because they were lucky. Like everything else in our life, wealth is the result of our conscious manifestation.

Conscious manifestation is the science of altering and experiencing reality as we wish.

It's not taught in schools.

The key word here is ‘conscious’. Because we are manifesting all the time, whether we are aware of it or not!

Health, relationships, abundance or even poverty - we attract in reality what we want to experience.

We carry our own respective wealth blueprints.

Each of us carries our personal equation with wealth. If we experience wealth struggles, chances are that we are carrying an unconscious tendency to mistrust, fear or shrink from inviting abundance into our life.

Resolving this problem is the first step towards transforming our wealth equation.

Most often, the answers lie in our past relationship with wealth - ideas we were fed as children, past failures, or some decisions we made.

With simple understanding and awareness, one can alter his conscious equation with wealth.

The unconscious ideas we carry about wealth are deeper and more difficult to uproot. But it’s not impossible!

It's not a desire, it's my belief that I will create good wealth in couple of years from now. My journey of wealth creation has already begun. It's an experiential truth for me.

It's so simple, you too can come along.

Want to Create Wealth .......  Know more from me...... !!

Rajiv Kapoor
9839034761

Tuesday, 23 May 2017

6 things to know why equity mutual funds are a good option for making investment

6 things to know why equity mutual funds are a good option for making investment

The scheme gets compounded returns which help in multiplying your money over a certain period of time.

Amongst the various investment avenues present in the financial market, equity mutual funds are one of the best category funds for an investor to invest their money.

Equity mutual funds not only help you in getting capital appreciation, but also help in getting tax savings. For that purpose you need to go for the options available under equity mutual funds which are specially designed to give you a tax benefit. These funds may even provide you inflation-beaten returns in the future.

They can be linked to financial goal

Most of the funds are open-ended, which makes it easy to link the investments with any of the financial goals, like child marriage, child education, vacation, retirement planning, wealth creation etc. Investors can achieve their financial goals, as the schemes comfortably fit in the duration of any goal which they wish to get it fulfilled. However, make sure that the financial goal you are opting for should not be less than five years.

They are diversified

The amount invested through equity mutual funds are spread in substantial sectors and have holdings in various companies which allows the fund manager to spread the risk and reduce the future losses due to market volatility. However, equity funds having a well-diversified portfolio cannot escape all risks. Therefore, you should never put all eggs in one basket.

They are tax-saving

Investors can avail tax benefits by investing in ELSS (Equity linked saving scheme) funds. These equity-linked tax saving investment schemes which provide investors a total tax saving benefits of Rs 1.5 lakh under section 80C of the Income Tax Act 1961.

These are tax-free

Equity mutual funds, which are invested for more than one year of time horizon, are tax-free. Even dividend received from mutual fund scheme is also tax-free in the hands of investors. Therefore, you get the desired appreciated capital without any tax getting deducted from any source.

They are highly return oriented

The scheme gets compounded returns which help in multiplying your money over a certain period of time. You earnings get reinvest and returns are calculated on every sum of the final earnings which includes return earnings of the previous years. The more you remain invested, the more you will be able to increase the potential of your inflation beaten investment earnings.

They are easily redeemable

It is very easy to redeem your money from open-ended equity funds. These mutual funds offer easy to invest facility through which investment can be done through the ECS mode. Whenever you want to withdraw your free units, it can be done very smoothly through redemption process. You can even stop your SIP at any point of time without getting into too many formalities. After signing the redemption form, it takes a maximum of three working days to get your money in the registered bank from where you have started your investments.

Rajiv Kapoor
9839034761

Friday, 19 May 2017

Can You Trust Your Bank Relationship Manager?

Can You Trust Your Bank Relationship Manager?

What happens when you go into your bank to deposit a large sum of money or if you have a huge balance in your savings bank account.

Probably someone from the bank staff would approach you with an excellent investment option for your cash or your bank balance. This person is your Relationship Manager.

You'll be told to divert your money into a product as the money that is lying in your account is generating very low return while their investment product will deliver way better returns.

So, shall you do as he says? Since he's your banker and there exists a relationship of trust between the bank and the customer, and you entrust your hard earned money with the bank, because you trust the bank.

The answer to this is simple, “No”

We often hear about instances wherein individuals were fooled by their Relationship Managers, and were made to invest in a product which were far from suitable for them.

A 60 year old man approached his RM, he wanted to invest a part of his retirement corpus in a product which could give him a better rate of return than his saving account. He wanted to keep this money as his emergency fund, so there should be safety of principal and flexibility of withdrawal.

The RM sold him a long term single premium endowment plan.

Now what will the poor old guy do with this policy. He has to dedicate a huge amount today which will be locked in for a long period of time, probably until he dies. Moreover, it didn't serve the purpose of an Emergency Fund. And the worst part is, he didn't even know that he bought an insurance policy.

In another instance, a 32 year old man who was on the lookout for a good tax saving option, asked his Relationship Manager for advice. The RM suggested him a product which had the following features:

1. The investment is eligible for deduction u/s 80C and 10D

2. He would get a life insurance cover of Rs 15 Lacs

3. He will get a fixed return of 12% p.a.

What else could he ask for? The RM was a Messiah for him.

Was he really?

Probably Not.

The reality was, the first two points were true. The third point had a small glitch, and that was Fixed Return, it was actually a return of upto 12%. It could be 4%, 5%, anything below 12%. And another very important point that the RM forgot to mention was, this product had a lock-in of 22 years.

The investor was quite confident about the product, but then he decided to consult his wise uncle before investing. This decision helped him from being screwed up big time. The Uncle could sense there's something fishy because of the over enticing features of the product. So, he researched and revealed the truth to this investor, that this product was not just meant for him.

There is no end to such mis-selling stories. Your bank RM should be the last person to seek investment advice from. The advice can cost you dearly.

But why do the Relationship Managers sell the wrong product to the investors?

So, they mis-sell because of the following three factors:

1. The Relationship Managers get Commissions on the investments that you do through them. And each investment product has a different commission percentage attached to it. And generally, the commission paid on a product and the quality of the product are inversely related. This means an investment product which bears a high risk and offers low return will offer a higher commission, compared to a product which bears a lower risk and offers high returns. So it goes unsaid, that the RM will pitch that product which will bring him the highest Commission.

2. The Relationship Managers get sales Targets. They get overall targets as well as targets to sell specific products. So, in order to achieve their targets, the RM would make you as their target, and will try to sell those products to you, where they are falling behind.

3. The Relationship Manager will offer those products to you which are lying on his shelf. The bank will have a tie – up with limited number of companies, so they have only those products to offer which are offered by those companies. For Eg. You want to buy a Term Plan. Now you ask your bank RM to suggest the best Term Plan for you. Since your bank has a tie up with let's say two Insurance Companies, so your RM will give you options from those two companies only. Whereas, there are so many Term Plans available in the market which are way better than the ones suggested by him. But because he has only two options to offer, so he would advise you to go for either one of them.

So to conclude, your investment is a product of the RM's Commission, his targets and the products available with him.

The only way to avoid falling prey to the trap is be updated, and take a well researched and informed decision. The idea is you should not blindly trust anyone when it is about your hard earned money and not that after reading this article, you look at your Relationship Manager with an eye of suspicion and run away whenever he comes towards you. It is because not everyone mis-sells, he might have something good for you.

You should rather research, consult your financial advisor whenever you get investment advisory from someone else.

So, the crux is banks are a good place for taking loans, for depositing money, but not for seeking investment advice.

Rajiv Kapoor
FCS
Investment Advisor
9839034761

Sunday, 14 May 2017

Delay in Investing

Nurture Investments
9839034761

Rs 2.35 lacs after 10 years which means Rs 1.31 lacs in todays worth (discounting inflation @6%), this is what procrastination costs you if you delay by just 6 months in taking a small decision of opening an SIP in an equity mutual fund.

You delay your investment decisions month on month and then wonder how your friend is wealthier than you ..... Isn't it ??