With banks’ lending rates hitting a high, asset management
firms have raised Rs 1.2 lakh cr through FMPs in 1.5 yrs.
Indian companies have found an eager lender in asset
management companies (AMCs). With interest rates rising 300 basis points in the
last one-and-a-half years, AMCs have raised as much as Rs 1.2 lakh crore
through fixed maturity plans (FMPs) and companies account for more than half of
this. The same money is being used to fund companies by investing in their
papers.
Senior AMC sources say that the process of lending to
companies had gathered traction due to high lending rates of banks. “We have
set up a team dedicated to analysing corporate papers like commercial papers
(CPs), corporate bonds (CBs) and non-convertible debentures (NCDs),” said the
CEO of one of the top five fund houses.
Companies also stand to benefit from this. For instance, an
AAA rated company has to pay 9.5-10 per cent for commercial papers of up to one
year. Similarly, for corporate bonds of longer tenures, they have to pay
9.6-9.75 per cent.
“In comparison, banks charge 50-200 basis points over the
base rate, in the current market scenario, even for the best of companies,”
said a risk management head of a bank.
That is, considering that the base rate of State Bank of
India stands at 10 per cent, the cost of short-term loans would be 10.5 per
cent and 11-12 per cent for loans of longer terms for top-rated companies. The
rate of interest would keep rising for companies rated lower.
While the mutual fund industry lends to companies through
other schemes, like liquid, liquid-plus and income schemes, FMPs have come to
the focus once again because fund managers are getting money that allows them
to take calls for the longer term.
Exiting these schemes after they have been listed on the
stock exchanges is difficult in the absence of a robust secondary market. As a
result, investors in these schemes have to be locked in for the entire tenure.
However, both retail and corporate investors have been
aggressively investing in these schemes because the attractive rates are making
these popular for investors too. Axis Mutual Fund CEO Rajiv Anand says: “FMPs
have certainly caught the fancy of retail investors because of predictability
in returns.” In fact, in the wealth management and private banking segment, vis
and vis bank deposits, these products are being aggressively routed to high
net-worth individuals.
The main competition for FMPs comes from banks’ fixed
deposits. But the rates are quite competitive. Sample this: The country’s largest
bank, State Bank of India, offers 9.25 per cent on a one-year fixed deposit,
with the rate staying the same for up to 10 years. Returns from a one-year FMP,
at 9.4 per cent, according to industry sources, is slightly higher. And, the
portfolio consists of only bank certificate of deposits (CDs). A slightly
riskier portfolio that invests in commercial papers will offer higher returns
of 9.6 per cent.
Importantly, the post-tax returns make these more
attractive. For an investor in the highest income-tax bracket (30 per cent),
returns would be around 6.25 per cent on an FD. On the other hand, returns from
FMPs would be taxed at 10.3 per cent without inflation indexation, and 20.6 per
cent with indexation.
Even if one does not take the inflation indexation benefit,
the return would stand at 8.43 per cent.
For someone in the lowest income-tax bracket (of 10 per
cent), the returns from FDs and FMPs are comparable. Also, if someone goes for
inflation indexation, the benefits will also be substantial, because of the
high inflation rate of 9-10 per cent.
Importantly, fund houses make FMPs more interesting by
having 13-14-month products. In such products, an investor gets double
indexation benefits. That is, if an FMP is bought in April 2011 and is maturing
in May 2012, the investor will get double indexation benefits — one for 2010-11
and another for 2012-13.
Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/amcs-turn-eager-lenders-to-companies/452357/
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