Saturday, August 31, 2019

5 Trillion Dollar Economy Math


$ 5 Trillion Maths

From the Ramparts of the Red Fort, Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared on the 15th August: “The goal to make India a $5 trillion economy by 2024 is challenging, but achievable."
By a simple CAGR calculation, The Indian Economy needs to grow at 13.11 % nominal rate to achieve the desired figure by 2024.
Assuming the Current year GDP real growth rate of 7%, inflation of 3.4% and a constant Rupee Dollar exchange rate, we should touch $ 3 Trillion by the end of this year. Hence, we shall have to grow @ 13.62 % Nominal rate to achieve the target by 2024, when the next Elections take place, and that assuming the Rupee Dollar rate stays at current level because we are talking of a GDP in $.
If the Rupee depreciates to 75 to a $ as is widely accepted, we need to grow @ 15.6% nominal rate to achieve the target. If we want to reach it by 2025, we need to grow at 12.3% Nominal rate.
Challenging but achievable!

Is $ 5 Trillion GDP by 2024 achievable?

Historical GDP Growth
India had a GDP of $14 Billion at the time of Independence. It took 60 years to achieve the GDP of $1Trillion in 2007. Thereafter it took nine years to reach the second Trillion and will take only four years to reach the next Trillion. Indian GDP will cross $3 Trillion in 2019-20 and hopefully touch five Trillion by 2024 thereby achieving the next Trillions in two years or less.

The Journey of Other Nations:
To get a better idea, lets compare the proposed Indian journey with similar economies and how they completed the journey from $ 1 trillion to $ 5.0 Trillion.

US completed this journey from $ 2.5 Trillion to $ 5 Trillion in 10 years, Japan in 7 years and China in only 3 years.

What does the Journey Mean?
Just to get the perspective right, each Trillion Dollars addition means, we shall be adding an economy the size of Indonesia or 1.25 times Saudi Arabia or more than three times the Pakistan GDP every year.
At a GDP of $5 Trillion, our per capita income will touch close to $4000 which means the average household Income of a family of four will be close to
Rs 100000 per month. This will also reduce the people below poverty line by more than half to less than 200 Million.
When the economy grows and per capita income rises, discretionary spending is the first area, which is impacted, and consumption shoots. As income levels rise, The % spend of on the basics comes down, Maslow starts taking over and you start moving up the hierarchy of needs. India’s potential to consume is huge as penetration levels in most industries are very low.
 
Just to illustrate, In China, The air conditioner penetration went up from 7% to 70% during its journey from $ 1 Trillion to $ 5 Trillion. India is today at a 15% penetration level and even if it reaches 50%, you can imagine the kind of boom in the air conditioner market it will produce. Nowadays the word Auto is spoken with a word of caution and skepticism. Without going into details, I shall just like to mention that Indians bought 3.3 million cars (Four wheeler passenger vehicles) in 2018 and Indians bought more than 20 million two wheelers. How long will the guy on the two wheeler remain on one and how soon will he shift to a four wheeler, despite the rise of Ola & Uber, is best answered by you alone.
Moving onto services, only 4% of Indians have any kind of Life insurance; The total profit of the 40 AMCs(asset Management Companies) comprising the Indian Mutual Fund Industry is not even Rs 4000 Crores
The Profit Pool is so small that one midsized popular hedge fund, Pershing Square, makes more Profit than the Entire Indian Asset Management Industry.
For a country the size of India with its teeming Billions, The ills affecting the Indian public, be it extreme poverty, unemployment, the health or nutrition parameters and other social indicators, can only be erased by sustained double digit economic growth and development. Without sustained growth at that level it has little hope of employing the roughly one million young people who join its workforce every month. Unless we take advantage of our current, favorable demographics, we are never likely to emerge as an upper-middle-income economy with a prosperous and thriving middle class.
The key to achieving the $ 5 Trillion target lies in boosting the average economic growth rate to eight per cent, keeping inflation at four per cent and working towards foreign exchange stability. If the math and economic policies by the Modi government converge, India with a GDP of $5 trillion will in 2024-25 to be the world’s fourth-largest economy, pulling ahead of Germany and nipping at the heels of Japan.
As per IMF, by purchasing power parity (PPP) norms, India with a GDP of $11.4 trillion in 2019 is already the world’s third-largest economy. Besides, if India’s informal, shadow economy – which comprises, even after demonetisation and GST, around 25-30 per cent of all economic activity – is taken into account, India’s GDP would be far larger than official figures indicate.

Can India complete the journey by 2024?
According to the Central Statistics Office (CSO), although India’s average real GDP growth during the last five years has been 7.5 per cent, it has slowed down to 6.8 per cent in 2018-19. The Indian growth has been slowing down and is down to less than 6% in the Q4 of 2018-19 and is further down to just 5% in Q1 of the current financial year.
Given the external headwinds and the twin balance-sheet problem, is it possible to push the real GDP growth to 8 percent and above, inflation @ 4% and have a stable Rupee?
The prerequisites for the kind of growth that transformed the fortunes of the Asian tigers and then China have not yet been put into place.
Economic Growth comes from three major areas, Consumption led growth, investment led growth and Exports.

Consumption Led Growth Strategy
Till now, India has been a largely consumption driven economy with consumption contributing to more than 60% of the growth.
India must ensure the real GDP stays closer to 8 per cent mark by reviving consumption, which will directly trigger the private investment cycle.
Domestic consumption, which powers 60% of the GDP today, is expected to grow into a $6 trillion opportunity by 2030.
Domestic consumption can again be divided into two parts, credit led consumption and savings led consumption. Essentially consumers consume when they feel good about the future, they take loans when they feel the future is good and income is assured and they can pay their EMI’s. A great sentiment also leads to dipping into savings as one feels that they can be replenished from future earnings.
Credit led consumption has faced challenges in the recent times both on the buy side due to poor consumer sentiment and the sell side due to lack of liquidity and the NBFC crisis. Household Debt also has almost doubled to Rs 6.73 lac crore in the last 5 years. The rising debt is however still the lowest among most of the emerging economies with India only at around 15%,as compared to Russia: 16.5%, Brazil: 26.7% and China: 50.3%

Investment Led Growth
As far as private sector investment is concerned; Given the Poor Sentiment, unviable capital cost and low capacity utilisation of barely 70 per cent, it's unlikely corporate sector will invest in new capacity creation unless higher consumption increases the capacity utilisation to around 80-85 per cent and interest rates come down to competitive levels.
The answer lies in encouraging greenfield investments in newer areas such as defense manufacturing, promoting start ups, focusing on innovation and productivity improvement which could help trigger a revival in investment cycle.
The major contributor in Investment hence will have to be the Government investment. Modi 2.0 has already committed $ 1.4 Trillion (Rs 100 lac crore) towards Infrastructure spending in the next 5 years.
Just to get the perspective about Rs 100 lac crore right; The total free float Indian market cap is around Rs 70 lac crore, the total bank deposits in India in 2018 were Rs 118 lac crore, Total insurance assets are Rs 36 lac crore. Here, we are talking big numbers by Indian standards and about 10% of GDP to be spent on Infrastructure alone.
Given the large funding requirement, the domestic savings pool is limited. In a world awash with excessive liquidity, the time is ripe to tap into the global savings pool. India needs to attract huge foreign capital and meaningful initiatives were announced in the last budget. The Government also proposes to raise a $10 Billion Foreign Sovereign debt to raise resources for growth. The Rs 1.76 Trillion bonanza from the RBI should also go a long way towards this goal. If India can achieve the $1.4 Trillion Infrastructure investment in the next 5 years, let me assure you that the multiplier effect alone will ensure that we achieve the target before 2024.

Exports led growth
India’s total exports grew by 7.97% yoy to reach US$ 535.45 billion during FY 2018-19, thereby contributing to close to 20% of our GDP. In Apr-Jul 2019, exports grew by only 3.13% thus dragging the GDP growth downwards.
In a world, which is increasingly becoming more protective, an impetus from world trade seems improbable. For exports to meaningfully contribute in the next 5 years, the manufacturing capacities should have already been in place. China became the world’s manufacturer in the last 25 years and managed to boost its economy largely driven by investment and exports. Japan did the same in the 70’s and 80’s when their electronics and autos flooded the world market.
Thus, We will have to depend on the changing demographics of India to push consumerism – namely rely on increasing young population contributing to a growing workforce, urbanisation and a quantum increase in average household income. Infrastructure spend, growth in value added services exports, tourism and the push in manufacturing, should be other major contributors.

$ 5 Trillion GDP and the impact on the Stock Market
Finally, how will this journey to $ 5 Trillion impact the stock market is best illustrated by the two charts below. The first gives a historical perspective of the journey so far.

The key to achieving the $ 5 Trillion target lies in boosting the average economic growth rate to eight per cent, keeping inflation at four per cent and working towards foreign exchange stability. If the math and economic policies by the Modi government converge, India with a GDP of $5 trillion will in 2024-25 to be the world’s fourth-largest economy, pulling ahead of Germany and nipping at the heels of Japan.
As per IMF, by purchasing power parity (PPP) norms, India with a GDP of $11.4 trillion in 2019 is already the world’s third-largest economy. Besides, if India’s informal, shadow economy – which comprises, even after demonetisation and GST, around 25-30 per cent of all economic activity – is taken into account, India’s GDP would be far larger than official figures indicate.

Can India complete the journey by 2024?
According to the Central Statistics Office (CSO), although India’s average real GDP growth during the last five years has been 7.5 per cent, it has slowed down to 6.8 per cent in 2018-19. The Indian growth has been slowing down and is down to less than 6% in the Q4 of 2018-19 and is further down to just 5% in Q1 of the current financial year.
Given the external headwinds and the twin balance-sheet problem, is it possible to push the real GDP growth to 8 percent and above, inflation @ 4% and have a stable Rupee?
The prerequisites for the kind of growth that transformed the fortunes of the Asian tigers and then China have not yet been put into place.
Economic Growth comes from three major areas, Consumption led growth, investment led growth and Exports.

Consumption Led Growth Strategy
Till now, India has been a largely consumption driven economy with consumption contributing to more than 60% of the growth.
India must ensure the real GDP stays closer to 8 per cent mark by reviving consumption, which will directly trigger the private investment cycle.
Domestic consumption, which powers 60% of the GDP today, is expected to grow into a $6 trillion opportunity by 2030.
Domestic consumption can again be divided into two parts, credit led consumption and savings led consumption. Essentially consumers consume when they feel good about the future, they take loans when they feel the future is good and income is assured and they can pay their EMI’s. A great sentiment also leads to dipping into savings as one feels that they can be replenished from future earnings.
Credit led consumption has faced challenges in the recent times both on the buy side due to poor consumer sentiment and the sell side due to lack of liquidity and the NBFC crisis. Household Debt also has almost doubled to Rs 6.73 lac crore in the last 5 years. The rising debt is however still the lowest among most of the emerging economies with India only at around 15%,as compared to Russia: 16.5%, Brazil: 26.7% and China: 50.3%

Investment Led Growth
As far as private sector investment is concerned; Given the Poor Sentiment, unviable capital cost and low capacity utilisation of barely 70 per cent, it's unlikely corporate sector will invest in new capacity creation unless higher consumption increases the capacity utilisation to around 80-85 per cent and interest rates come down to competitive levels.
The answer lies in encouraging greenfield investments in newer areas such as defense manufacturing, promoting start ups, focusing on innovation and productivity improvement which could help trigger a revival in investment cycle.
The major contributor in Investment hence will have to be the Government investment. Modi 2.0 has already committed $ 1.4 Trillion (Rs 100 lac crore) towards Infrastructure spending in the next 5 years.
Just to get the perspective about Rs 100 lac crore right; The total free float Indian market cap is around Rs 70 lac crore, the total bank deposits in India in 2018 were Rs 118 lac crore, Total insurance assets are Rs 36 lac crore. Here, we are talking big numbers by Indian standards and about 10% of GDP to be spent on Infrastructure alone.
Given the large funding requirement, the domestic savings pool is limited. In a world awash with excessive liquidity, the time is ripe to tap into the global savings pool. India needs to attract huge foreign capital and meaningful initiatives were announced in the last budget. The Government also proposes to raise a $10 Billion Foreign Sovereign debt to raise resources for growth. The Rs 1.76 Trillion bonanza from the RBI should also go a long way towards this goal. If India can achieve the $1.4 Trillion Infrastructure investment in the next 5 years, let me assure you that the multiplier effect alone will ensure that we achieve the target before 2024.

Exports led growth
India’s total exports grew by 7.97% yoy to reach US$ 535.45 billion during FY 2018-19, thereby contributing to close to 20% of our GDP. In Apr-Jul 2019, exports grew by only 3.13% thus dragging the GDP growth downwards.
In a world, which is increasingly becoming more protective, an impetus from world trade seems improbable. For exports to meaningfully contribute in the next 5 years, the manufacturing capacities should have already been in place. China became the world’s manufacturer in the last 25 years and managed to boost its economy largely driven by investment and exports. Japan did the same in the 70’s and 80’s when their electronics and autos flooded the world market.
Thus, We will have to depend on the changing demographics of India to push consumerism – namely rely on increasing young population contributing to a growing workforce, urbanisation and a quantum increase in average household income. Infrastructure spend, growth in value added services exports, tourism and the push in manufacturing, should be other major contributors.

$ 5 Trillion GDP and the impact on the Stock Market
Finally, how will this journey to $ 5 Trillion impact the stock market is best illustrated by the two charts below. The first gives a historical perspective of the journey so far.

Based on the US and the China experience and our historical journey so far, when the Indian GDP doubles to $ 5 Trillion, one can easily say that the Sensex will cross 100000.
Whether we achieve the target in 7 years or 8 or 10, we are definitely in for interesting times.

Note: All information provided in this blog is for educational purposes only and does not constitute any professional advice or service. Readers are requested to consult a financial advisor before investing as investments are subject to Market Risks.


Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Defination of Multiplier effect of Money in GDP of Country

I am explaining in a layman Language,
For Example:

The rain has stopped. You step out of home to run a few errands. On the way, you find Rs 500 note lying on the ground. You pick it up and put it in your trouser pocket, thinking you'll donate it to the local charity. But you give in to temptation as soon as you cross the local book shop and buy the latest bestseller for Rs 500. The bookseller is an alcoholic and uses the money to buy his stock of alcohol for the day. The liquor shop owner takes the Rs 500 and walks across to the local cinema and buys the ticket for the latest movie, featuring his favourite heroine. He also buys some atrociously priced popcorn and a soft drink. The cinema owner has to go attend a wedding at the other end of the town and he gives that very Rs 500 note to a taxi driver, given that his driver is on leave.

What's happened here? The movement of the initial Rs 500 has made everyone better off. The initial Rs 500 has been spent four times and has generated Rs 2,000 worth of economic activity. In that sense, the first Rs 500 contributed Rs 2,000 to the Indian gross domestic product (GDP). The same wouldn't have happened if you had taken the Rs 500 and deposited it in the bank or simply kept it in your pocket.

Monday, July 22, 2019

The falling Market, and your Portfolio?What to do?


The falling markets and your Portfolio – what to do?

During the last one month you must have noticed that equity markets have been going down. Large cap index is down about 5-8% from their all time highs. Worst hit are small caps (index down 40-45% from all time high) and Midcaps (index down 20-25% from all time high). Some stocks are down by 60-70% from top. You must be wondering why is all this happening, should you sell now and and is it worth at all to invest in equity markets. I understand your concern.
What you are witnessing right now is painful but a pretty normal behavior for the  markets. They tend to respond to sentiments in the short term and fundamentals in the long term. For no reason, markets can go up and down by 10-15% in a matter of few months. It has happened many times in the past and it will continue to happen in future too. This behavior is not limited to India but seen across world markets.
A few pointers:-
– Most of the times (say 9 out of 10 times), markets recover from short term corrections within a few months or quarters. The best action is to remain invested and ignore the volatility.
– Sometimes (say 1 out of 10 times), markets will go in deep corrections of 30-50%. This happens once or twice every decade and lasts a few years. It starts with a small correction and the slide continues to the bottom. Everything bleeds. The reason of such fall could be weak economy and future outlook, falling international markets or scams like 2008. How to protect this? Well, the honest answer is, we can’t. Almost no one knows for sure that markets will fall so much. At best, it’s a wild guess of a few so called analysts, who shout loud after the incidence. It’s just a matter of being lucky this time with their prediction. We must know that these analysts or predictors are mostly those who got it wrong many times and no one noticed. You may ask – Can I predict it and save your losses? Frankly, my answer is No. At best, I can minimise the impact by proper asset allocation, understanding your needs and monitoring your portfolio regularly. So, the hard truth is that even when markets fall by 30-50%, the only choice and best course of action is to stay invested, continue your SIPs and wait for markets to recover. Trying to time the market (selling and hoping to buy at a lower price) never works.
– During bad times, media will aggrevate the situation by highlighting things even more. I bet, they also know nothing about it and just have a good time by getting all the attention of readers and viewers, increased TRPs and ad revenues.
– Investing through mutual funds is safer than investing directly in stocks. While mutual funds have fallen but the damage is huge in individual stocks. While some stocks may never recover, most mutual funds recover from lows to their previous highs and even better due to expert fund management.
– It is very natural for you to feel the pain because of portfolio value going down. I can understand and I feel the pain too. Trust me, I am reviewing everything and doing my best I can.
– The worst thing to do at this time is to panic. It might so happen that after you redeem/book profits/book losses, markets will continue to slide and you will feel you did the right thing. Well, in the short term, yes. But unless you buy at the bottom, you won’t benefit from this exercise because markets will definitely go up with time. And buying low happens only in theory.
– Events like these are lessons for both you and me to learn and improve our future decisions and action, to stick to asset allocation, to take only those risks which we can and to plan things better.
– Goal based planning works best. We must not take risky bets with short term money. If the money that you have invested is for long term, let it stay long term.
We need to work together in thick and thin. We need to discuss being on the same side of the table. These are tough times and we will go through with it together.
Feel free to call me anytime if you wish to discuss on the portfolio and future action plan.

Best Regards:
Mohit jagga
Financial Advisor.

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Friday, July 12, 2019

What is your style for Investing? Here's a Ready Reckoner!

Stock Investment is very much like a buying a Mobile phone.

Most of us, at least once in our lives, have racked our brains over which phone to buy. With so many options in the market, and each option characterized by its own special attributes, it is a tough decision. Should you buy the one with a larger RAM? Or should you go with the one with a better camera? Or should you just get the pink one?
Investing in stocks is eerily similar. Should you invest in Coal India which recently posted spectacular profit growth? Or should you go with the safe and stable HUL? Or should you just get something which has been rallying? These seemingly simple questions form the basis of factor-investing or style-based investing.
All stocks in the market can be compared based on some common fundamental attributes – profit growth, leverage, return on equity, price-growth, variability of earnings, valuation multiples, and so on. These attributes characterise factors or styles – the Value factor represents stocks available at cheap valuation multiples; Growth factor, as the name suggests, represents the set of stocks which have been posting high growths in profits; Momentum stocks are the ones which have exhibited recent price appreciation; and Quality stocks represent the safe and stable stocks characterized by low leverage, stable earnings, and decent returns on equity.
Just as in the world of phones, all-rounders are hard to come by. Stocks which fare well on some of the attributes may not fare well on others. For example, if a stock has been consistently posting higher profit growths, it is not likely to be available at a low enough valuation multiple. Similarly, a stock which has been posting relatively slow and stable growth in profits, may not provide a steep enough price appreciation. Basically, there is no stock that has a perfect score on all attributes, and is available at cheap valuations. Thus, arises the need to make a choice.
With phones, if you are a video game junkie, you would choose the one with a powerful processor, great display, and a long battery life. If you are into selfies, you would prefer something that has a better camera and fancy filters. Similarly, in investing, if you are looking for a good night's sleep, you would go for Quality stocks. But if you like the thrill of investing and want to experience the ups and downs of the stock market, you should go with the riskier Momentum investing. No factor fits all. You or your investment advisor should first analyse your risk appetite, investment objectives, and constraints before going for any of these styles of investing.
Another important point to note with factor investing is that factors are cyclical. No style of investing does well all the time. The starkest example of this is Momentum investing. When the market is exuberant, rising stocks keep rising, and if you are a Momentum investor, you keep minting money. But the happy ride stops abruptly when bulk of the investors start getting wary of the heights and book profits.
Needless to say, if you stay invested, you would be in for a rude shock when the rally reverses. Similarly, Value stocks can go years with meager returns before people start buying into them, and only then, would you be able to reap benefits on your Value buys. Usually, it is at the turn of a rally, that people start noticing the quiet Value stocks sitting at the corner. What this means is that Value and Momentum are negatively correlated – in trending markets, rising Momentum stocks are the hotspot of all share market activity, and the unpopular Value stocks are sidelined.
However, as soon as the rally ends and people turn risk-averse, Momentum stocks plummet, and Value stocks take the centre-stage.
This behaviour of factors has given way to multi-factor investing, wherein the objective is to invest in the right factor at the right time. But market-timing is an elusive seductress… in the greed to make money in all market scenarios, you could get the timing wrong and end up losing your nest egg. It is, therefore, usually a much smarter bet to stay invested in a single-factor based portfolio provided you have the stomach to patiently ride out the market ups-and-downs, which can be punishing at times.
In this series, we shall explore the most common factors in considerable detail – the intuition behind them, hypothetical portfolios and their performance, and the pitfalls to look out for.

Monday, June 24, 2019

Why Mutual funds Sahi hai??

*List of HERO TO ZERO Stock*

1. Reliance Infra   - 2500 > 42.70
2. Rel Capital   - 2924 > 62
3. Rel Power  - 430 > 4.15
4. R COM - 800 > 1.45
5. R NAVAL - 117 > 3
6. DHFL   - 690 > 62.90
7. Jet Airways - 883 > 33
8. Jain Irrigation - 264 > 25
9. PC jewellers  - 600 > 45
10. Vakrangee  - 515 > 31
11. Suzlon  - 400 > 3.35
12. Kwality  - 225> 2.45
13. JP Associates  - 339 > 2.70
14. JP Power - 140 > 1.90
15. JP Infra - 100 > 1.60
16. manpasand beverages  - 500 > 28
17. Central Bank - 210 > 22
18. J&K Bank  - 176 > 34.70
19. Mercator - 165 > 1.65
20. Aban offshore - 5400 > 35.40
21. Sintex Plastic Tech - 120 > 8
22. BPL 152 > 21
23. HDIL 1100 > 14.50
24. Videocon 760 > 1.70
25. MTNL 217 > 7.60
26. ILFS 308 > 3.10
27. Cox & King - 367 > 62.70
28. Mcleod Russel  - 325 > 18.85
29. Eros Int  - 643 > 25.80
30. LEEL  Electricals - 340 > 7.30
31. Alok Ind 105 > 3.80
32. Subex 725 > 5.80
33. Adlabs  - 207 > 4.05
34. Atlanta - 270 > 9.30
35. IFCI - 114 > 7.65
36. GMR Infra - 124 > 14.80
37. Uttam Galva  - 172 > 7.55
38. Oil Country  - 172 > 5.90
39. Punj Llyod - 580 > 1.25
40. Lovable lingerie - 612 > 69
41. Shree Renuka Sugar - 120 > 9
42. Patel Eng  - 1020 > 18.80
43. RS Software  - 400 > 20.75
44. On mobile - 361 > 31.15
45. Windsor machines - 150 > 25.10
46. Bartronics  - 255 > 3.90
47. Rolta - 375 > 5.45
48. kohinoor food - 136 > 16.30
49. Dolphin offshore - 445 > 29.40
50. Snowman logist - 130 > 29.50
51. IRB INFRA 310 > 93
52. HEG 4500 > 1320
53. Varroc Engineers 1151 > 450
54. Goa Carbon 1185 > 340
55. Hotel leela 85 > 7.55
56. Vodafone Idea 118 > 11.35
57. Educomp 1100 > 1.50
58. VIP Clothing 100 > 11.70
59. Gati 290 > 57
60. GTPL 180 > 58
Regards
Mohit jagga
Financial Advisor

http://www.wealthymill.com/

Cont: 9466787277

That's why MFs are better than direct equity as fund managers know when to exit bad stocks 😊😊

Friday, June 21, 2019

Jet Airways case study

The Promoter,The lender, The Management, The Strategic Partener,and The Government were all flying blind
 
 
After months of stalling, there is some progress made towards a resolution of the Jet Airways crisis. The Mumbai bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) admitted a petition filed by the State Bank of India for resolution of Jet Airways under the Insolvency code and suggested a timeline of 90 days, citing it as a matter of national importance.
In anticipation of such a move, the Jet Airways stock shot up by 150 percent on Thursday. The huge move was possible because of the unwinding of the short position in the counter.
But is the rally justified? Certainly not.
The case is now with NCLT, a body which is expected to protect the interest of the lenders. Given the present status of Jet Airways, it is very unlikely that there would be anything left over for shareholders after providing for lenders and creditors in case liquidation is recommended by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).
Jet Airways has already been grounded for two months after the airline ran out of cash, owing Rs 8,500 crore to a consortium of 26 banks led by SBI. Many employees of the company have since then been picked up by other airlines. Further, a number of lawsuits have been filed against the company and most of its 100 operational aircraft impounded.
Any company, consortium of investors or private equity player keen on acquiring the company will have a tougher task to revive the company than creating a new one. Unlike a manufacturing unit which is mothballed before it is shut down, reviving a company in the service sector like an airline is far more difficult.
It would be a sad day for the 22,000 employees and over 80,000 indirect dependents of Jet Airways if the company is stripped and sold. The blame for bringing the company down to the current state has to be shared by the promoter, its management, employees, lenders, strategic partner and the government.
The airline industry has low accident rates only because they listen to the black box of a crashed aeroplane and analyse the faults and take lessons from it. Similarly, the fall of Jet Airways also holds lessons for all stakeholders.
 
Promoters
For promoters, Jet Airways' promoter Naresh Goyal's stubbornness is a key takeaway. He held on to his position for too long, even when there were buyers and bankers willing to negotiate a deal to save the airline on condition that he steps down. For Goyal, his position was more important than the airline he created. Goyal also has did not see the changing tide of low-cost airlines. He continued to micro-manage the company, losing sight of the big picture.
 
Management
Goyal's management team and its Board of directors should have advised him of the changing fortunes. When it was obvious that the industry structure had changed with the fast growth of low-cost airlines, the Jet Airways team continued with its high-cost structure. For the management of other companies, the Jet Airways management represent the traditional workforce who would follow the owner unquestionably. This is not healthy for any company. Divergent views need to be encouraged and a logical solution chosen for the growth of the company rather than massaging the promoter's ego.
 
Employees
The highly paid employees of Jet Airways, especially the pilots, were worse than industry union leaders. At the drop of a hat, they were willing to go on a strike despite knowing the poor health of the company and the industry. They took political help to push their case and exert pressure on the management. But at the same time, thought should be spared to those thousands of workers who kept on coming every day for work without getting paid for months. There is a lesson here for the human resources departments across all companies.
 
Lenders
Lenders lived up to their reputation of offering an umbrella when the sun is out. Kicking out Goyal from the cockpit was the worst step the lenders could have taken. Goyal had his skin on the table and was running from pillar to post to keep his airline afloat. From the day Goyal was asked to resign from Jet Airways the company's operation collapsed like an aircraft without its engine.
The banks were only concerned about their own money and had no interest in running the company. They did not extend much-needed working capital which would have bought them time to find a suitor to buy the company. Their insistence of not taking a hit on their loan has now resulted in them losing most of their money. A case of penny wise and pound foolish is how this consortium led by SBI can be described.
There is no lesson here for the bankers since they never learn. They have not learnt from thousands of default cases and it is unlikely that they will now. SBI and other banks made the same mistake in the case of Kingfisher Airlines and are now crying foul over Jet Airways.
 
Strategic Partners
Jet Airways' strategic partner Etihad Airways also has contributed to the fall of Jet Airways. It placed its own interest in filling its Gulf and European routes which were in its parent company over that of running the airline efficiently in India and other parts of the world. The one-sided relationship led to a number of senior staff in Jet Airways leaving the company at a time when they were most needed to steer the company. Goyal in his desperation for funds agreed to terms with Etihad which in the long run led to its failure.
The lesson here for all companies seeking strategic partners is to think long-term rather than short term survival.
 
Government
Just like the bankers the government and its bureaucracy too will not take away anything from the Jet Airways fiasco. Creating a mess in Air India and Kingfisher the government did little to help Jet Airways. Though helping the company directly would have set a bad precedent, the government could have taken steps to help the airline industry. When almost all airlines are making losses there is surely something structurally wrong in the industry.
Airline operators have been pointing out the skewed cost structure on account of government taxes but all pleas fell on deaf ears. Unless something is done for the sector we may soon see more airlines crashing.
 
Shareholders
Finally, there is a big lesson for the shareholders. The market rewards performance and not hopes. Jet Airways was grounded in April 2019 yet there were buyers for the company at Rs 160. It took one month for these buyers to realise that there is little hope for the company. Even on Thursday there were no lessons learnt, a company going to NCLT does not mean that it is saved. It is sent there when all other doors are closed, just like they are for the shareholders of Jet Airways unless there is an investor with big pockets willing to take a huge risk.

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Capex cycle Recovery: Cautious but Hopeful

Highlights

The main overhang of general elections holding back capex is behind us


Capex cycle, particularly government-led spending, to start from Q2 FY20


Private capex to pick up towards the end of the current fiscal


Sectors such as road, construction, railways, defence, power T&D and water to see contract award resuming soon


India's capex cycle has faltered, and a recovery remains elusive so far.
A series of events such as the Goods and Services Tax launch, demonetisation after-effect, the introduction of RERA in the real estate sector, and the banking and NBFC crisis disrupted the game.
Of course, a slowdown in government functioning ahead of the general elections and political uncertainty played their part. Other cues such as volatile oil prices, currency depreciation and the bitter trade war added fuel to the fire.
A few of these factors are behind us. We also analysed post-results commentary by managements of engineering and capital goods companies in light of the March quarter results. We sought to find answers to whether a capex recovery is on the cards and if yes, which sectors are better placed.
What can drive a capex cycle recovery?
The major uncertainty surrounding the elections is over. A government with a convincing majority is seen to improve the investment climate.
Projects that had been on hold because of the elections should come up for bidding once the Cabinet takes shape. Companies are hopeful that the projects nearing the 2020 completion deadline or flagship ones such as the Renewal Energy Mission, Bharatmala, Namami Gange, Housing for All, Green Corridor (power T&D project) would be expedited and accorded priority.
While the investment climate is expected to improve, companies have highlighted that the funding environment is improving as the banking and NBFC crisis is easing. Moreover, equity markets are expected to remain supportive. This should help kickstart project execution, especially those which have been delayed by the liquidity squeeze.
A lower interest rate regime and RBI's soft policy stance should augur well for growth in capital investments, especially by the private sector.
Timing of revival
At its analyst meet, L&T sounded a bit cautious about order inflows in Q1 FY20 in view of the Model Code of Conduct. However, the conglomerate has maintained its order intake guidance of 10-12 percent growth for this financial year and is confident of surpassing that guidance on the back of a pick-up in infrastructure activities, post-elections.
Similarly, Thermax offered a positive outlook. "For the past 4-5 months, there has been a significant slowdown in the large industrial capex in the country. However, we expect the order momentum to pick up in the second half of FY20," said M S Unnikrishnan, MD, Thermax.
Like Thermax and L&T, most companies are expecting the capex cycle -- particularly government-led -- to resume from the second or third quarter of the current financial year.
When will private capex resume?
Government-led capex is only one part, but a broad revival in private sector capex is expected only towards the end of 2019-20.
In fact, L&T's management cautioned that the private sector is being selective and a revival may not start in FY20, considering NCLT cases, a spate of defaults and the liquidity tightness. Companies like Thermax have also highlighted issues such as excess capacity in many industries.
ABB India sounded a bit cautious about any uptick in growth, at least in the current quarter. “Markets have been soft for a long time now, particularly on the industrial side. There have been fairly fewer investments. We believe that the June quarter too will be difficult in light of the recent performance of automobile, FMCG and a few other segments. Beyond that, it is difficult to read and assess the implications of a big political event in the country at this point in time,” said Sanjeev Sharma, MD, ABB India, during its March quarter analyst conference call. The commentary was before the election results were out.
The assessment at engineering companies is that a major or broad-based private capex recovery may not happen soon. Investors will have to wait till FY20-end or early next fiscal to see any concrete signs of a revival.
Also, Corporate India may wait for more clarity from the upcoming Budget on the new government's policies, allocations and priorities. They may wait for announcements from key ministries to set their priorities.
Which sectors will lead the recovery?
Companies are unanimous about the pick-up in government-led infrastructure and construction sector spending.
"With the momentum set on infrastructure building, coupled with incremental tax revenues, the emphasis on investment in airports, rail, roads, water supply and distribution, expressway programmes, power availability and connectivity, oil and gas production and mass rapid transit system is expected to continue," said L&T in its outlook for 2019-20.
Roads are a priority and orders from this sector are expected to resume soon. Others such as construction of ports, capex in railways and defence could be next. Companies in the defence sector such as Cochin Shipyard, Bharat Electronics, Bharat Dynamics, Hindustan Aeronautics, GRSE and many others are sitting on an order book of 5-10 times their annual sales.
They are expecting execution to improve and deliveries to take place in the first and second quarters of FY20. However, L&T is sees some delay in defence projects getting government approval, following which the award of contracts should begin.
India Inc thinks that the Railways would step up on order execution, helping revenue growth. Firms such as IRCON, RVNL, RITES are sitting on outstanding orders of about 5-6 times their sales. KEC International's railway division reported a strong 76 percent YoY growth in revenues in Q4.
KEC said the work for about 10,500 km of railway electrification will be awarded in FY20 and is expecting to get orders of worth Rs 3,500 crore in FY20, up 21 percent, from this segment.
"I think going ahead, the sectors such as construction should pick up. Along with that, we are expecting railways, marine, oil & gas to pick up. Overall, in the current fiscal, the domestic industrial business should grow at the higher end of 10-12 percent," said Cummins during its investor call.
Cement is another area where companies are witnessing sustained demand. Thermax in its call said: "All cement companies are now setting up captive power plants and FY20 cement ordering should continue." While the order flow in the domestic oil and gas sector was mostly subdued -- except the one that was won by Engineers India -- it expects two major refinery orders to come by in the second half of 2019-20.
In the transmission & distribution (T&D) sector, KEC International's management has upped its sales growth guidance to about 15-20 percent for FY20 and expects predicts better T&D ordering post-elections.
According to KEC International, the projects pertaining to the Green Corridor worth Rs 14,000-15,000 crore will be finalised by July-end as the timeline for the completion is within 15-18 months from now.
GE T&D has taken a similar line on the opportunities arising out of the Green Energy Corridor project. It expects evacuation of close to 67,000 mw of renewable energy. On an immediate basis, it sees tendering of about 29,000 mw and orders worth of Rs 6,000 crore, possibly starting in Q1 of 2019-20.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Lesser known benefits of Credit Card


# Five lesser known features and benefits of credit cards

Credit cards are one of the widely-used cashless payment methods because of the convenience they offer.
Credit cards also offer a ton of features and perks to the cardholders. While everyone does know a few common features of credit cards, there are several features that are lesser-known to most of the users.
Here are some lesser-known features of credit cards to know about.

#1

Customers can avail loans against their credit card

One of the lesser-known features of credit cards is the loan against credit cardfeature. Cardholders can avail loans on their credit cards against the available credit limit.
These instant loans are paperless loans and are one of the quickest and easiest options to borrow money as they are approved within minutes. However, all card issuers may not offer this facility.

#2

Credit cardholders can check their credit score for free

Another lesser-known credit card feature is cardholders can check their credit score for free.
Credit score companies, including major ones like CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, and Highmark, generally charge fees to provide credit profile or credit score.
However, these companies are usually tied-up with leading banks/card issuers and provide detailed analysis of an individual's credit profile to them; so, cardholders can access their credit score.

#3: Customers can also use the balance transfer feature
Some credit cards also come with a feature for transferring the balance from one (or more) credit cards to a single card. While all credit cards don't have this feature, card issuers offering this feature allow their customers to transfer balances from other credit cards.

#4

Many credit cards offer extended warranty, price protection

Credit card holders can also benefit from features like extended warranty and priceprotection policies offered by several card issuers.
Through the extended warranty feature, one can get extra warranty for free on certain products purchased using their credit cards.
Meanwhile, the price protection policy helps customers get a refund if the price of something they have purchased has fallen.

#5: Convert higher credit card purchases into EMIs
Many credit card issuers nowadays are offering an option to convert purchases of a certain value into EMIs. Customers, who cannot repay high-value purchases fully in one billing cycle, can use this facility to convert those into EMIs at a comparatively lower interest rate.



Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Paid last EMI of Car loan? What should you do.


A number of borrowers believe their job is done after paying the last equated monthly installment (EMI) on their car loan. But, it still an unfinished task for the borrower.
After completing the repayment of your car loan, there are some important things that you need to do as we explain below:
1. Take full and  final payment receipt
If you made the last EMI on your car loan or did a prepayment to close the car loan, then get the final payment receipt from your bank. This receipt will have the details of total amount paid, the date of last payment and the closure of the car loan.
2. Take a NOC
Within 2-3 weeks' time of repaying the car loan, you must receive all your documents from the bank. The set of documents include a No Due Certificate (NDC) or No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the bank along with other documents submitted at the time of the car loan application like cancelled cheques etc. In case, you don't receive from the bank then better to enquire after its status.
3. Get your repayment statement
Do collect the full repayment statement of your car loan from the bank. This will be useful while updating the credit history in case of any discrepancies in your credit score and the report. Also, this statement will help to resolve future conflicts if any while selling the car, claiming insurance, etc.
4. Remove hypothecation
Hypothecation essentially means that your car for which you have taken a loan for is kept as collateral with the bank till you pay off your loan. The car is in the physical possession of the customer but the bank is the actual owner of the car till the customer pays off the entire loan amount.
Kusal Roy, Managing Director at Tata Capital Financial Services says, “It is important to remove the hypothecation because it helps at the time of claiming insurance and till the hypothecation is removed you cannot sell or dispose the vehicle.”
To remove hypothecation, NOC from the bank is required. Submit the NOC to the regional transport office (RTO). Roy cautions, “The NOC from the bank is valid for three months from the date of its issue. So, do not delay in submitting the application for hypothecation removal from the car registration certificate at your respective RTO office before NOC expiration.” Only after the NOC is submitted to the RTO, for removal of the hypothecation, will you be able to transfer the car in your name.
Also, request for form 35, which will state the removal of hypothecation between you and the bank.
5. Update your car insurance policy
Hypothecation information is even recorded by car insurance company on your car insurance policy. So, you need to remove it from your car insurance policy after complete repayment of car loan. For the removal of hypothecation from the insurance policy, submit the NOC and revised car registration certificate to the car insurance company.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Why Health Insurance is Important?

🤔 Why health insurance is very important for everyone even if they are financially strong ?
Answer 😯
💡People are saving money for their *Future Goals*,
💡Savings do not happen in a day or in a month, *It takes YEARS*,
💡Life is very *UNCERTAIN* and *DISEASES* are a part of that uncertainty.
💡When *DISEASE* comes it spoils all *FUTURE PLANNING* because it *COSTS HIGH* especially *Critical Illnesses*,
💡 *Cancer*: 5 Lac and more
💡 *Heart Ailments* : 3 Lac to 8 Lac or more,
💡 *Kidney Issues*: 5 Lac to 15 Lac or more,
💡 *Liver Failure*: 5 Lac to 15 Lac or more,
These diseases are *DANGEROUSLY* increasing in India.
💡People are not that much *FINANCIALLY STRONG* to spend 5 Lacs to 15 Lacs easily at a go...
💡Mostly during illness people might have to sell their *PROPERTY, GOLD and OTHER VALUABLES* or dig deep into their savings.
💡People also end up *BORROWING* money from others...

*HEALTH INSURANCE  helps to SAVE* hard earned money with *REASONABLE PREMIUM*,

BUY **HEALTH Insurance and
STAY_ *CONFIDENT*
and *PROTECT YOUR WEALTH*

Doctor Saves Life and  Heath Insurance Saves your Lifestyle.

Best Regards:
Financial Advisor
Mohit jagga
9466787277.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Top Financial Mistakes

What are some of the mistakes of Indians that are destroying their financial lives?

*Buying insurance policies for investment purpose*:

Have you invested your money in insurance plan to get a return in future? Big mistake! Out of 100 people I have spoken, 95 have made this mistake.. Very few people understand the difference between term plan, endowment plan, etc.

*Not able to crack the credit card mystery:*
Are you paying the minimum amout due on your credit card payment? If yes, you are trapped in credit card mystery. On the other side, very few people really enjoy the benefits like free lounge access, buy one get one movie ticket, etc.

*No idea about the power of compounding:*
Everyone has come across the formula of compounding but very few people really understand its power. This is the reason people do not start saving early and hence lose out on the power of compounding. Albert Einstein said that power of compounding is the eighth wonder of the world.

*Buying stocks based on tips without any knowledge:*
You will find every Tom, Dick and Harry giving stock tips over Facebook, Whatsapp and TV. Unfortunately, a lot of people fall in a trap of these people and invest money without any knowledge. What is the end result? They lose everything!

*Becoming a victim of lifestyle inflation*:
Moving from 2bhk to 3bhk just because you have got a good hike, upgrading your car because you have got some bonus are some of the examples of lifestyle inflation destroying financial lives.

*Buying things just because they are on discount*:
From Amazon’s “Great Indian Sale” to Flipkart’s “The Big Billion Days”, everyone is encashing on the weakness of Indians buying things just because it is on discount. Funny thing is now you will find such sales every other month.

*Getting tempted to go for an exotic vacation*
just because someone put a post on Facebook and Instagram: Instagram and Facebook are introduced as Social Media Platform but they are actually destroying the entire social fabric. Friends are jealous of each other. Most of them are just social media friends. Facebook and Instagram are more of a marketing platform where people post stuff just to get some likes and companies promote their product and services.

*Spending a bomb on weekend parties:*
5 days work and 2 days party: This is the new culture in India. Pubs are jam-packed on weekends where people would spend a bomb on drinks. By the end of the month, they are left with no money.

*No track of cash flow:*
Very few people keep a track of their expenses. Most of them just don’t know where the money is gone.

*No emergency budget:*
Not having any extra money in the case of an emergency results in embarrassing situations of borrowing money from friends and relative. Some people even break their investments and make a big mistake.

*No medical insurance*:
I have seen people losing out the lifetime savings just because they did not take medical insurance. One accident can shatter all financial dreams. Better be insured. Healthcare cost is rising and it is impossible to manage it without insurance.

*No financial plan:*
People do not know why they need to save money because they don’t know their financial goals.

*No diversification*
: Some people would invest all their money in real estate, some would invest all the money in gold, some would just keep it in the locker, some would invest all the money in the stock market. Very few people understand the right way of diversifying the investments.

*Spending all the hard earned money on children marriage:*
Thanks to our hypocritic society! People save their entire life just to spend all the money on random relatives who only bother about the food and arrangements. What is the topic of discussion at weddings? “Sharma ji ne to unki beti ko car gift kari. (Mr Sharma has gifted a car to his daughter)”. “Mehta ji ne unki beti ko 50 tola sona diya” (Mr Mehta has gifted 500-gram gold to his daughter.)

*Buying excessive gold only to keep it in the locker:*
Gold worth lakhs is kept in lockers only to be used once or twice a year. This is resulting in the money getting blocked and hence not getting any returns on it.

*An extremely conservative approach with investment:*
Traditionally, people have been risk-averse. They would just have an FD and live on 6–7% annual interest. Some would just keep the cash at home.

*Lack of clarity between asset and liability:*
Having a car is not an asset because it consumes fuel and has a maintenance cost. Its price will only depreciate in the future. Car is a necessity but people spend a lot of money and even take the loan to buy a luxury car over and above their budget.

*Considering frugal as cheap:*
A lot of people confuse economic spending with being cheap. An economic spender does not compromise with quality but does his research well enough to buy the product or service at the lowest rate.

*Procrastinating investment decisions:*
“I will invest from tomorrow”. But the problem is that tomorrow never comes.

*Spending a lot of money on fancy stuff:*
A fancy car, a fancy house, a fancy watch, a fancy vacation. People want fancy stuff and willing to pay a premium irrespective of the value it generates.

*Lack of patience:*
“I can’t wait for my wealth to grow. I want to double my investments in 6 months. I need to invest in the stock market.” A lot of people lose their lifetime of savings because they don’t have the patience to understand the investment option and would blindly trust anyone with their investment.

*Depending upon others for investment decisions:*
“I don’t know anything about investment. Please manage my money.” Unfortunately, a lot of people are dependent upon others with their hard earned money. This is the reason we have a lot of self-proclaimed experts giving stock market tips.

*Not discussing the money matters in the family:*
Discussions related to money are considered as a taboo in Indian families. Nobody really discusses money matters.

*Getting too greedy with investment:* People blindly invest their money in penny stocks, day trading, futures and options. They eventually lose all their hard earned money. What is the root cause? GREED.

*Buying stocks at the peak and selling on fall:*
Most of the retail investors get over excited with a rising market and invest when the market is at its peak. Eventually, the market corrects and they sell the stocks at a loss.

*Wasting time on unproductive things:*
Rather than learning new stuff and growing the skillset, people end up wasting time on social media and YouTube.

*Lack of disciplined investment:* Instead of spending what is left after investing, people invest what is left after spending. This results in indisciplined investment.

*Root Cause:*
Lack of knowledge about personal financial management!!

Saturday, February 9, 2019

Why we must not invest in sinking ship in Stock Market?

Today i want to guide you that we must not invest in sinking ship kind of shares,because eventually they become zero or penny shares one day,and we keep on averaging to reduce our buying cost by thinking that in future, Share prize will rise,but it is seen mostly in cases, they money has been eroded completely.So we must control our emotions in Stock Market,and behave rationally in the same,and accept our Mistake if any done. Let us see with some Examples:

                    SUZLON ENERGY

It was well renowned company in 2005 to 2008 era in alternative sources of Energy, and it was traded@ 1500rs per share kind of, it started falling Since 2008 and have never recovered till date and people who get averaged in this stock,have eroded all money.Suppose one has invested 1 lakh in Suzlon@ 1000, he got 100 shares in 2007, in 2008 he invested 1 lakh more @ 500, he got 200 shares,in 2010 he invested again 1 lakh@ 200  he got 500 shares, now he invested 1 lakh @ 100 in 2012, he got 1000 shares, he again invested 3 lakh in 2015 @ 40 by expecting that from there it will not fall again, that is why he invested 3 lakh this time and got 7500 shares, but stock did not stop falling here, in 2017 He again invested 5 lakh @ 15 ,he got appx 33000 shares.

Now he has Total Shares 42300 shares
Average cost                     29 per share

TOTAL INVESTMENT APPX 12 LAKH

Current share prize is 3.70 paise

NET LOSS @ 25 RS PER SHARE 

42300*25 APPX 10.5 LAKH

90% Wealth has been eroded by Averaging this Stock

                   JP ASSOCIATES 

Same has happened in this stock, i will elaborate its prizes yoy as explained in Suzlon case, Now you can understand the same.


In 2007@ Share Prize @ 1000 per Share

Now @ 6 per Share.

Same money has been eroded who did averaging in this stock in last 10 years


                                               HDIL

In 2007 @ Share Prize of 1500

Now @ 22

Many companies became Zero like KINGFISHER AIRLINES, GITANJALI JEMS VIDEOCON,SKUMARS NATIONWIDE  and thousands of 


So we must invest in Stock Market by Taking Proper Advise if we are not able to do Research by own and if it share fall regularly, never average it, in Market everybody does mistakes, so just accept it as LARSEN AND TOUBRO accepted by holding shares of SATYAM IN 2008, ICICI BANK accepted their mistake by holding KINGFISHER AIRLINES.

BE RATIONAL IN MARKET, THERE IS NO PLACE OF EMOTIONS HERE 

Thanks.





Wednesday, January 16, 2019

8 Reasons You Need an Emergency Fund

01
 You Are Trying to Get Out of Debt:

Your emergency fund can help you stop adding to your debt with each bump in the road. An emergency fund can help cover the things you don’t budget for like car repairs or medical costs. You can use your emergency fund to handle these stressful events and make it easier for you to stay focused on getting out of debt.
  • It is easier to pay extra money on debt right away when you have a cushion for unexpected expenses.
  • Include your emergency in your budget until it is fully funded.

02
 You Have Just Started Budgeting:


When you first start budgeting, you may be leaving out some of the expenses that you need to plan for. Your emergency fund can cover some of these expenses the first year, and then you can add those expenses into your budget as they come up. This could be annual expenses like taxes or other items like gifts or fees for organizations. Your emergency fund can help you as you adjust to your budget. 
  • As unplanned expenses come up, write them down and adjust your budget to include them in the future.
  • After a few months, you should not have any unexpected expenses.

03
 You Only Have One Income

If you only have one source of income, it is essential to have a substantial emergency fund. This can help you get through an unexpected job loss or illness that keeps you from working. If you are single or if you the sole income provider in your family, you should work on having a year’s worth of expenses saved up. You can build up the larger emergency fund after you get out of debt

  • 04
     You Are Self-Employed or a Contractor

    If you are self-employed, an independent contractor or if you work a job that does not allow you to claim unemployment benefits, it is important to have a good emergency fund saved up. It is also important to have multiple income streams as the amount of work goes up and down. If you know that your contract may end soon, you should work on building up more money in your emergency fund. 
    • Additionally, you may want to plan extra savings for months when business is slow.
    • Keep track of your invoices to make sure that you do not miss collecting on money to avoid needing to use your emergency fund.
  • 05
     You Own Your Home

    When you own your home, you will have to pay for all of your repairs and upkeep. Although you should set up a sinking fund to cover remodeling and most repairs, you may have unexpected costs like a plumbing repair or air conditioning repairs. Your emergency fund can help you handle these costs and make owning your home just a bit less stressful.  
    • Home repairs can be expensive, as is replacing an air conditioner or furnace. Try setting up funds to save for these expenses before they occur.
    • Be sure to plan for your taxes in your budget.
  • 06
     You Live Far Away from Family

    It can be expensive to travel home, and the costs go up if you need to travel at the last minute for an emergency. It helps to have a good emergency fund saved up to cover the cost of last minute tickets to home or other family members in the event of an medical emergency or a funeral.  
    • Price the cost of an airline ticket and other expenses and start saving up for that.
    • Remember that last-minute bookings are often more expensive.
  • 07
     You Have Medical Issues

    A serious medical condition can cause you to max out your deductible each year. You may have routine tests that add up quickly. You may also use all of your sick leave and end up taking days off with no pay. A well-funded emergency fund can help you deal with these costs and make it easier to get through these challenging times.  
    • Medical issues can be expensive and insurance companies may not pay everything that you expect them to pay.
    • You may also miss work and run out of sick pay which can lead to bigger issues. Your emergency fund can help offset this.
  • 08
     You Are Saving for a Goal

    If you are working toward a goal like owning a home or starting a business, your emergency job can stop you from dipping into those savings  when unexpected expenses crop up. This can prevent you from moving backward with these goals. Although your progress forward may slow a bit as you rebuild your emergency fund, you will be able to leave the money that you are saving for you.  This is a great way to protect your savings

.


  

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Financial Tips

Financial Tips:

1. Avoid buying property on loans as it eats most of your earnings unless you have a clear plan for its repayment. It's important to monitor cash flow. Though, the house will be your asset, your liability will be much more.

2. Start a SIP at a very young age. Try to save atleast 15–25 % of your earnings.

3. Avoid buying a car unless you use it everyday.
.
4. Do not let this sentence scare you. “Mutual fund investment are subject to market risk. Please read the offer documents carefully before investing”. Most people avoid investing in mutual funds just because of this one warning. Yes, there is a market risk, but look at the history and growth of mutual funds.

5. Try having a simple wedding.

6. Atleast 20% of your wealth should be liquid so you can utilize it when necessary.

7. Considering inflation, you are actually losing money if it is in savings bank account. Do not keep huge money in savings bank account.

8. If you invest in stocks, pay due attention.

9. If you invest in stocks have a separate account for delivery investment and Intraday investment. It is easy to monitor this way and also makes tax calculation easy

10. Do not have a belief that property and car make you rich. Its what you save and invest, that is important.

11. *Never invest in insurance for returns. Insurance is not an investment option. It is a risk management tool.*

12. Never use credit cards for lavish spending. Use credit cards intelligently and for needs not for wants.

13. Cancel all credit cards before you die. Or inform family about all your accounts, credit cards, loans and saving now itself.  Even a small residue will cost your family much.

14. Invest on yourself and then on other investments.

15. Always try to balance your earnings with your savings first, then on  spending and loans. Never take unnecessary loans. Always have reserve and utilise them and unless no other go never take loan.

16. Always have a plan for future events on your career, life, spending and finance.

17. Always have a reserve on your savings for contingency and urgent situations.

18. Your personal life and health are the most important investment. Do have a regular health check and do healthy workout every day. Stay healthy and live happily.

19. Always remember death can come anytime.....so please do buy adequate term Insurance if you have dependents.

20. Prepare a Will. It may avoid unnecessary fights after you die.