204x Filetype PPTX File size 0.12 MB Source: gargicollege.in
NAV, EXPENSES, ETC OF MUTUAL FUNDS NET ASSET VALUE • Price of is stock is determined by demand and supply forces. • On the other hand, a mutual fund’s value is determined by how much is invested in the fund as well as the costs to run it, and its number of outstanding shares. • Value of assets = value of all securities in the portfolio • Value of liabilities = value of all liabilities and fund expenses • The NAV of a fund is the fund’s per share market value • It is the price at which an investor would buy from or sell to the fund company. • NAV per unit tells us how much one share of the fund is worth. NET ASSET VALUE…. contd.. • NAV per unit = Net Asset Value of the Fund / Number of Units Outstanding • Net Assets = [ Market Value of Investments + Receivables + Accrued Incomes + Other Assets ] - [ Accrued Expenses + Payables + Other Liabilities ] EXAMPLE • Value of securities = Rs. 75 lakh • Cash = Rs. 15 lakh • Accrued income = Rs. 24 lakh • Short-term liabilities = Rs. 1 lakh • Long-term liabilities = Rs. 12 lakh • Number of outstanding shares = 20 lakhs • NAV per unit = [Rs. 75 lakh + Rs. 15 lakh + Rs. 24 lakh ]- [Rs. 1 lakh + Rs. 12 lakh] / 20 lakhs • NAV per unit = Rs. 101 lakh/20 lakh = Rs. 5.05 per unit COSTS INCURRED BY MUTUAL FUNDS • Every mutual fund house incurs expenses. • According to rules, mutual funds deduct a small portion from investors’ investments to pay for these expense • Equity funds are allowed to charge up to 2.25% of the assets that a scheme manages. • Debt funds’ expenses are capped at 2%. • The lower the expense ratio of a scheme, the higher the NAV. • “However, while expense ratio is important, it should be borne in mind that it is not the only criterion while selecting mutual fund scheme. A scheme with a consistently decent track record, but a higher expense ratio may be better than the one which lower expense ratio, but gives poor returns”. - AMFI
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