Tuesday 10 April 2007

Exchange Traded Funds इन India

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) were first launched in India in December 2001 by Benchmark AMC. ETFs are fundamentally different from normal funds and have thus developed something of a reputation for complexity.

While some of the details of how AMCs run ETFs are genuinely complex, they have nothing to do with investors. For the investors, ETFs are a straightforward instrument offering some interesting features. Let's see what makes ETFs different.

ETFs are index funds. An index fund is an equity fund, which tracks a particular index like Sensex or Nifty. The index fund holds the same stocks as the underlying index and in the same proportion as the index. From an investment point of view, ETFs are index funds that, unlike normal index funds, can be bought and sold at intra-day prices.

In this respect, they are more like shares rather than MFs. Normal index funds are, of course, available only at end-of-day NAVs from fund distributors. ETFs, since they need to be transacted upon throughout the day, are bought and sold through stockbrokers (using a demat account) just like shares.

However, behind the scenes, ETFs are very different from any other kind of funds. How an ETF really differs from an index fund is the manner in which it is created, bought and sold. In the case of normal mutual funds, investors pay cash to the fund, which in turn buys the stocks and bonds.

When ETFs are set up, the initial participants will give the fund the basket of stocks, which constitute the underlying index and take units of the fund in exchange. These market makers will in turn sell these units to investors just like a distributor does.

The market maker is usually a broker. Since ETFs are sold through brokers, you will pay brokerage in place of loads. ETFs tend to have lower brokerage than normal fund loads.

The NAV of an ETF is a fraction of the value of the index. Thus the NAV of an exchange-traded fund based on the Nifty can be one-tenth of the value of the Nifty. If the Nifty is at 3500 points the NAV will be Rs 350.

Effectively, this fractional pricing means that a basket of stocks on Nifty can be purchased by an investor with a much lower outlay than it would otherwise be possible. This also enables smaller initial investments than what most index funds offer. By comparison, most Nifty index funds require a minimum investment of Rs 5,000.

In the case of other MF schemes, a fund buys back and sells units. In a way, an ETF resembles a close-ended scheme, where the units are not sold back to the fund and investors buy and sell the fund units on the market.

However, there is obviously no discount to NAV like closed-end funds. Unlike a close-end fund, supply can be altered by creating additional units or extinguished by withdrawing existing ones. Trading of the units ensures underlying stocks do not have to be bought or sold. Investors entering and exiting do not also affect existing investors. An ETF has a much lower tracking error than an index fund.

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