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PRESENTATION
ON

MUTUAL FUNDS & MERCHANT BANKING
PRESENTED TO:PROF. Premraj Alva

PRESENTED BY:ANIKET SAWANT
SUNEET HEREKAR
SETH DIVISHA DINESH
SHANTANU SHAHASANE
RAVINDRA JADHAV
PRATIK AWASARE
SHRUTIKA KADAM
VIVEK KOTHAWALE
ADITI JOSHI
ROLL
NO.

NAMES

131

PRIYANKA R. MERUGU

133

ANIKET V. SAWANT

134

SUNEET S. HEREKAR

135

SETH DIVISHA DINESH

136

SHANTANU R. SHAHASANE

137

RAVINDRAT. JADHAV

138

PRATIK S. AWASARE

139

SHRUTIKA S. KADAM

140

VIVEK V. KOTHAWALE

141

ADITI A. JOSHI

TOPIC MUTUAL FUND & MERCHANT BANKING

SLIDE NO.
We would like to express my special thanks of gratitude to my Prof. Premraj Alva Sir, who gave us
golden opportunity to do this wonderful project on the topic “MUTUAL FUNDS &
MERCHANT BANKING”. While studying this project we gained lot of knowledge and
information.
Secondly we would also like to thank to our friends who helped to finish this project within the
limited time. We have made this project not only for marks but also to increase our knowledge.
Thank you one and all.
CONCEPT AND HISTORY OF MUTUAL FUNDS
HOW MUTUAL FUNDS WORK WHAT THEY ARE
TYPES OF MUTUAL FUNDS
IMPORTANCE OF MUTUAL FUND

 RISK FACTOR
SEBI GUIDELINES
FACILITIES AVAILABLE TO INVESTORS
SELECTION OF FUND
REASONS FOR SLOW GROWTH
BENCHMARKING
LIST OF MUTUAL FUNDS COMPANIES IN INDIA
HISTORY OF MERCHANT BANKING
SERVICES OF MERCHANT BANK
QUALITIES REQUIRED OF MERCHANT BANKERS
PROBLEMS OF MERCHANT BANKING
SCOPE OF MERCHANT BANKING IN INDIA
GUIDELINES OF MERCHANT BANKERS

1

MERCHANT BANK & COMMERCIAL BANK
Let us understand the concept of a
Mutual Fund

2
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800
Only Rs. 3000 to invest

Imagine an investor who has only Rs. 3000 to invest. How
does he invest in all the major stock such that he creates
diversified portfolio

3
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800
There could be many such investor- who have small capital amounts to invest they can not buy
stock diversified manner
Only Rs. 3000 to
invest

4
Enter The Fund Manger

5
The fund manger walks in now. He pools in the money of all the investors
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800

Total Rs. 9000 to
invest

6
With the pooled money he buys the shares available
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800

Buy each share of Infosys,
SBI, L & T And Grasim

Amount to invest = Rs. 9000
Amount to invest = Rs. 2700

Rs. 2100
Rs. 1400
Rs. 2800
___________

Rs. 9000

7
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs. 2800

The investors put together hold 1 share each of Infosys, SBI, L & T
And Grasim. Effectively, each of them hold 0.33 shares of each
company

8
This is the concept of mutual fund. Investors combine to pool their money and
invest in a fund- whose manager then invests into securities on their behalf.
Each investors thus gets benefit of being able to create a diversified portfolio
even while investing smaller amounts
Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800

9
• A Mutual Fund is trust that pools savings of number of
investors who share a common financial goal.
• The money thus collected is then invested in capital market
instrument such as shares, debentures and other securities
• The income earned through these investments and capital
appreciation realized are shared by its unit holders in
proportion to the number of units owned by them

10
History of Mutual Funds
 First Phase - 1964-87
Unit Trust of India (UTI) was established on 1963 by an Act of Parliament. It was set up by the
Reserve Bank of India and functioned under the Regulatory and administrative control of the
Reserve Bank Of India. At the end of 1988 UTI had Rs.6,700 crores of assets under management.

 Second Phase - 1987-1993 (Entry of Public Sector Funds)
Entry of non-UTI mutual funds. SBI Mutual Fund was the first followed by Canrabank Mutual Fund
(Dec 87), Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund (Aug 89), Indian Bank Mutual Fund (Nov89), Bank of
India (Jun 90), Bank of Baroda Mutual Fund (Oct 92). LIC in 1989 and GIC in 1990.The end of
1993 marked Rs.47,004 as assets under management.

11
 Third Phase - 1993-2003 (Entry of Private Sector Funds)
With the entry of private sector funds in 1993, a new era started in the Indian mutual fund Industry, giving
the Indian investors a wider choice of fund families. Also, 1993 was the year in which the first Mutual Fund
Regulations came into being, under which all mutual funds, except UTI were to be registered and governed.
The Kothari Pioneer (now merged with Franklin Templeton) was the first private sector mutual fund
registered in July 1993.
The 1993 SEBI (Mutual Fund) regulations were substituted by a more comprehensive and Revised mutual
fund regulations in 1996. The industry now functions under the SEBI (mutual Fund) regulations 1996.The
number of mutual fund houses went on increasing, with many foreign mutual funds setting up funds in India
and also the industry has witnessed several mergers and acquisitions. As at the end of January 2003, there
were 33 mutual funds with total assets of Rs. 1,21,805 crores. The unit trust of India with rs.44,541 crores of
assets under management was way ahead of other mutual funds.

 Fourth Phase - since February 2003
There have been several amalgamation of mutual funds. The mutual fund have also become popular among
retail investors. There were 28 mutual funds operating in India in April, 2005
12
How Mutual Funds Work
WHAT THEY ARE
• A mutual fund is a company that pools money from
many investors and invests the money in stocks,
bonds, short-term money-market instruments,
other securities or assets, or some combination of
these investments.
• The combined holdings the mutual fund owns are
known as its portfolio. Each share represents an
investor’s proportionate ownership of the fund’s
holdings and the income those holdings generate
13
14
Types of Mutual funds

On the basis of
execution &
operation

Close-ended funds

On the basis of yield &
investment pattern

Open-ended
funds

Income Growth Balance Specialised Money
Taxation Leveraged Dual Index
Funds
Fund Funds
Bonds Aggressive
Funds
Market Funds
Funds Funds Funds
Funds Growth
Mutual
Funds
Funds
15

Offshore
Mutual
Funds

Property
funds

Funds
Of
Funds

Real
Estate
Mutual
Funds
Types of Mutual funds On the
basis of execution & operation

16
CLOSE ENDED FUND
Close ended funds are funds which have definite period or target amount
Once the period is over and or the target is reached, the door is closed for
the investors. They cannot purchase any more units. These units are
publicly traded through stock exchange and generally, there is no
repurchase facility by the fund. The main objective of this fund is capital
appreciation. Thus after the expiry of the fixed period, the entire corpus is
disinvested and the proceeds are distributed to the various unit holders in
proportion to their holding. Thus the fund ceases to be a fund, after the
final distribution. E.g. UTI Master Share, 1986.
17
OPEN ENDED FUND
Open ended funds are those which have no fixed maturity periods. Open
ended scheme consists of mutual funds which sell the units to the public.
These mutual funds can also repurchase the units. Initial Public Offer (IPO)
is open for a period of 30 days and then reopens as an open-ended scheme
after a period not exceeding 30 days from the date of closure of the IPO.
Investors can buy or repurchase units at net asset value or net value related
prices, as decided by the mutual fund. Example: Unit Trust of India‘s
Growth.

18
DIFFERENCE
CLOSE ENDED
• Close-ended schemes have fixed maturity
periods. Investors can buy into these funds
during the period when these funds are open
in the initial issue.
• After that such schemes can not issue new
units except in case of bonus or rights issue.
However, after the initial issue, you can buy or
sell units of the scheme on the stock
exchanges where they are listed.
• The market price of the units could vary from
the NAV of the scheme due to demand and
supply factors, investors’ expectations and
other market factors
19

OPEN ENDED
• These schemes have unlimited capitalization, openended schemes do not have a fixed maturity, there
is no cap on the amount you can buy from the fund
and the unit capital can keep growing.
• These funds are not generally listed Any time exit
option, The issuing company directly takes the
responsibility of providing an entry and an exit.
• This provides ready liquidity to the investors and
avoids reliance on transfer deeds, signature
verifications and bad deliveries.
• Any time entry option, An open-ended fund allows
one to enter the fund at any time and even to invest
at regular intervals. on any exchange.
Types of Mutual funds
On the basis of yield &
investment pattern

20
1. INCOME FUND

21

Income funds are those which generate regular income to the members on
a periodical basis.
It concentrates more on the distribution of regular income and it also sees
that the average return is higher than that of the income from bank
deposits.
The investor is assured of regular income at periodical intervals
The main objective is to declare regular dividends and not capital
appreciation.
The investment pattern is towards high and fixed income yielding
securities
It is concerned with short run gains only.
2. GROWTH FUND
Growth are those which concentrate mainly on long term gains i.e., capital
appreciation. Hence they are termed as “Nest Eggs” investments.
It aims at meeting the investors‘ need for capital appreciation.
The investor‘s strategy conforms to investing the funds on equities with
high growth potential.
The Investment tries to get capital appreciation by taking much risks and
investing on risk bearing equities and high growth equity shares.
The fund declares dividends. e. It is best suited to salaried and business
people
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3. BALANCE FUND

4. SPECIALISED FUNDS

It is a balance between income
and growth fund. This is called as
Income-cum-growth. It aims at
distributing regular income as well
as capital appreciation.
Thus the investments are made
in high growth equity shares and
also the fixed income earning
securities.

These are special funds to meet specific
needs of specific categories of people like
pensioners, widows etc

23
5. MONEY MARKET MUTUAL FUND
• The funds are invested in money market instruments.
• These funds basically have all the features of open ended funds but they invest
in highly liquid and safe securities like commercial paper, bankers‘
acceptances, and certificates of deposits treasury bills.
• These funds are called ―money funds‖ in the U.S.A. The RBI has fixed the
minimum amount of investment as Rs.1 Lakh, it is out of the reach of many
small investors.
• However, the private sector funds have been permitted to deal in money
market mutual funds. It is best suited to institutional investors like banks and
other financial institutions.
24
6. TAXATION FUND
It is a fund which offers tax rebated to the investors either in the domestic
or foreign capital market.
 It is suitable to salaried people who want to enjoy tax rebates particularly
during the month of February and March.
 An investor is entitled to get 20% rebated in Income Tax for investments
made under this fund subject to a maximum investment of Rs.10,000 per
annum. E.g. Tax Saving Magnum of SBI Capital Market Limited.

25
7. Leveraged Funds
Also called as borrowed funds as the are used primarily to increase the size
of the value of portfolio of a mutual funds. When the value increases, the
earning capacity of the fund also increases.
8. Dual Funds

It is a fund which gives a single investment opportunity for two different
types of investors. It sells income shares and capital. Those investors who
seek current investment income can purchase incomes shares. The capital
shares receive all the capital gains earned on those shares and they are not
entitled to receive any dividend of any type.
26
9. Index Fund
It is a fund based the some broad market index. This is done by holding
securities in the same proportion as the index itself. The value of these
index linked funds will automatically go up whenever the market index
goes up and vice versa.
10. Bond Funds

The funds have portfolios consisting mainly of fixed income securities like
bonds. The main thrust is income rather than capital gains.

27
11. Aggressive Growth
Funds

12. Off shore Mutual
Funds

These funds are capital
gains oriented and thus
the thrust area of these
funds is capital gains.
Hence, these funds are
generally invested in
speculative stocks They
may also use specialized
investment techniques
like
short
term
trading, option writing
etc.,
28

These funds are meant for
non resident investors.
These funds facilitate flow
of funds across different
countries, with free and
efficient movement of
capital for investment and
repatriation.

13.Property Fund
These funds are real estate
mutual funds. Its
investment also includes
shares/bonds of companies
involved in real estate and
mortgage backed
companies
14.Fund of Funds
It is a fund that invests in other mutual fund schemes.
The concept in prevalent in abroad.

15. Real Estate Mutual Funds

29

The real estate mutual funds scheme is mutual funds
scheme with the investment objective of direct or
indirect investment in real estate property
IMPORTANCE OF MUTUAL FUND
• TAX BENEFIT- Mutual fund do not deduct tax at source from dividends, mutual fund
themselves are totally exempt from tax on all income on their investment.
• SUPPORT CAPITAL MARKET- It provide sustainable domestic source of demand for capital
market instruments , it provide valuable liquidity to capital market.
• PROMOTE INDUSTRIAL DEVPT- It provide financial resources to the industries at market
rate, it create a demand for these capital market instruments.
• PROVIDE GREAT AFFORDABILITY & LIQUIDITY- It provide an attractive & cost effective
alternative to direct purchase of shares ,units can be sold to the fund at the net asset
value.
• ACT AS SUBSTITUTE TO IPO- It also guaranteed a certain percentage of IPO’s by
companies, allotment of shares is more or less guaranteed.
• KEEP MONEY MARKET ACTIVE- It provide stability to share prices, safety to
investors, resources to prospective entrepreneurs.
• PROVIDING RESEARCH SERVICE- Investment is done purely on basis of thorough
research, investor get the benefit of the research done by fund.
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Continue……..
• KEEP MONEY MARKET ACTIVE- It provide stability to share prices, safety
to investors, resources to prospective entrepreneurs.
• PROVIDING RESEARCH SERVICE- Investment is done purely on basis of
thorough research, investor get the benefit of the research done by fund.

31
RISK FACTOR
Type of risk

How the fund could lose money

Country risk

Foreign investment

The value of a foreign investment declines because of
political changes or instability in the country where the
investment was issued.

Credit risk

Fixed income securities

If a bond issuer can’t repay a bond, it may end up being a
worthless investment.

Currency risk

Investments denominated in a
currency other than the Canadian
dollar

Interest rate risk

Fixed income securities

The value of fixed income securities generally falls when
interest rates rise.

Liquidity risk

All types

The fund can’t sell an investment that’s declining in value
because there are no buyers

Market risk
32

Type of investment affected

All types

The value of its investments decline because of unavoidable
risks that affect the entire market.

If the

other currency declines against the Canadian dollar,
the investment will lose value.
SEBI GUIDELINES
1. These

Regulations may be called the Securities and Exchange Board of India

(Mutual Funds) (Third Amendment) Regulations, 2013.
2 . They shall come into force on the date of their publication in the Official
Gazette.
3. In the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Mutual Funds) Regulations,
1996, ─
(I) in regulation 24, in clause (b), the following proviso shall be inserted, namely"Provided further that the asset management company may become a

proprietary trading member for carrying out trades in the debt segment of a
recognized stock exchange, on behalf of a mutual fund.“
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• (II) in regulation 26, in sub-regulation (2), the following proviso shall be inserted, namely• "Provided that where the sponsor or its associates hold 50 per cent or more of the voting rights of the share
capital of the custodian, such custodian may act as custodian for a mutual fund constituted by the same
sponsor or any of its associates or subsidiary company if:
• (i) the sponsor has a net worth of at least twenty thousand crore rupees at all points of time; (ii) 50 per cent
or more of the directors of the custodian are those who do not represent the interest of the sponsor or its
associates; (iii) the custodian and the asset management company of a mutual fund are not subsidiaries of
each other; (iv) no person is a director of both the custodian and the asset management company of a
mutual fund; and (v) the custodian and the asset management company of a mutual fund sign an
undertaking that they will act independently of each other in their dealings with the scheme."

34
FACILITIES AVAILABLE TO INVESTORS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
35

ROLL OVER FACILITY
LATERAL SHIFTING FACILITIES
DIVIDEND SWEEP FACILITY
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWL PLAN
REISSUE FACILITIES
TRIGGER FACILITY
REPURCHASE FACILITY
Continue…..
• ROLL OVER FACILITY
At the time of redemption, the investor is given an option to reinvest his entire
investment.
• LATERAL SHIFTING FACILITY
Some mutual funds permit the investors to shift from one scheme to another
on the basis of NAV.
• REISSUE FACILITY
The unit brought from investor is again are being reissued to those who are
interested in purchasing them.
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Continue…..
• DIVIDEND SWEEP FACILITY
Unit holder is given an option to sweep or invest the dividend earned in a scheme into
any other open ended scheme
• SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWL PLAN
It is nothing but redemption at predetermined regular intervals at the option of unit
holder.
• REPURCHASE FACILITY
The process of buying back units from the investor by fund is called repurchase facility.
• TRIGGER FACILITY
It is a facility where transaction is automatically triggered.
37
SELECTION OF FUND
• OBJECTIVE OF THE FUND
Whether it is income oriented or growth
oriented.
• CONSISTENCY OF PERFORMANCE
Consistency in performance is a good
indicator of its investment expertise.
• HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
A good historical record could be a better
horse to bet on the new funds.
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• COST OF OPERATION
In this case, prospective investors should scrutinise the expense ratio of the
fund & compare it with others.
• CAPACITY OF INNOVATION
The efficiency of fund managers can be tested by means of innovative
schemes.
• INVESTOR SERVICING
In this case the most important factor to be considered is prompt & efficient
servicing.
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Continue…..
• MARKET TRENDS
A prudent investor must keep eye on stock market index, interest rate,
inflation rate.
• TRANSPERENCY OF FUND MANAGEMENT
The success of mutual fund depends to a large extent on the transparency
of the fund management.

40
REASONS FOR SLOW GROWTH
• DISPARITY BETWEEN NAV & LISTED PRICE
Real dilemma for investor is disparity between NAV &
listed price.
• NO UNIFORMITY IN CALCULATION OF NAV
There is no standard formula for the calculation of the
NAV.
• LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
Mutual funds in India are not providing adequate
information & materials to investors.
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Continue….
• POOR INVESTOR SERVICING
Mutual funds have failed to build up investor confidence by
rendering poor services.
• TOO MUCH DEPENDENCE ON OUTSIDE AGENCY
They don’t have their own research cell hence they have to
depend on outside agencies for collection of data.
• INVESTORS PSYCHOLOGY
Lack of patience among investors retard the growth of
mutual fund.

42
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• ABSENCE OF QUALIFIED WORK FORCE
Professional agents & intermediaries can build efficient management of
fund.
• OTHER REASON
Lack of investors education in the country, unawareness of mutual fund
industry etc.

43
BENCHMARKING
• Basis for choosing an Appropriate Performance Benchmark
• The appropriate benchmark has to be selected by reference to:
• The Asset Class it invests in. Thus, an equity fund has to be judged by from an appropriate
benchmark from the equity market and so on.
• The fund’s stated Investment Objective.

•
•
•
•

44

There are three types of benchmarks that can be used to evaluate a fund’s performance:
Relative to the market as a whole.
Relative to other mutual funds.
Relative to other comparable financial products or investments options open to the investor.
45
46
HISTORY OF MERCHANT BANKING
• 13th Century merchant bankers were traders of commodities and
acted as bankers to the kings of European states.
• They Financed the continental wars and coastal trades.
• They lent their names to lesser known traders by accepting bills
through which they guaranteed that the holder of the bill would
receive full payment.
• “Merchant Bankers” is a term of English origin. In its earliest
form, it was “Merchants and Bankers.” It meant that a firm that
began as merchant or trader extended its activities by offering
credit to its clients. Thereafter, some firms gave up acting as goods
merchants and concentrated on trade
finance, securities, investment management and venture capital

48
SERVICES OF MERCHANT BANK
• CORPORATE COUNSELLING
It involve various activities like project counselling, capital restructuring, project
management, loan syndication, etc.
• PROJECT COUNSELLING
It involve preparation of project reports, appraising project reports with
financial institutions or banks, deciding upon financing pattern etc.
• LOAN SYNDICATION
It refers to assistance rendered by merchant banks to get mainly term loan for
projects.
• POST ISSUE MANAGEMENT
It consists of collection of application forms & statement of amount received
from bankers, share certificate, screening application, refund orders, deciding
allotment procedure.

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• ISSUE MANAGEMENT
It involve management of issues which include marketing of corporate securities, equity of shares,
preference shares, debentures, etc.
• MARKETING
After SEBI approval the merchant bankers arrange a meeting with various entities like advertising
agent, company representative, publicity campaign
Merchant bankers have to ensure that the material is delievered to stock exchange at leas 21 days
before the issue option & to brokers to the issue, branches of brokers to the issue, underwriters on
time.
• PRICING OF ISSUES
According to SEBI guideline 1992 for capital issues have opened the capital market to free pricing of
issues.

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• UNDERWRITING OF PUBLIC ISSUE
It is an insurance to the company which proposes to make
public offer against risk of under subscription.
• PUBLIC ISSUE THROUGH PROSPECTUS
To bring out public issue merchant bankers have to
coordinate the activities relating to issue with different
government, public bodies, professional.
They have to ensure that information required by companies
act & SEBI are furnished in the prospectus.
It is only after SEBI clearance, prospectus can be filed with
registrar of the company.
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• PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
It refers to investment in different kinds of securities such as
shares, debentures, bonds issued by different companies & securities
issued by the government.
• MANAGERS,CONSULTANTS, ADVISERS TO THE ISSUE
They assist in drafting of prospectus, application forms, completion of
formalities under companies Act, appointment of registrar.
SEBI guidelines insist that all issues should be managed by atleast one
authorised merchant banker.
In issues over Rs100 crores, upto 4 merchant bankers are associated
could be associated as managers.

52
QUALITIES REQUIRED OF MERCHANT BANKERS
• Ability to analyse various aspects such as
technical, financial, economic aspects
concerning the information of an industrial
project.
• Knowledge about various aspects of capital
market, trends in stock exchange, psychology
of investing people, change in the economical
& technological environment in the country.
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• Ability to build up the bank-client relationship &live upto clients
expectation with total involvement in project assigned to them.
• Innovative approach in developing capital market instruments to satisfy
the ever changing needs of investing public.
• Integrity & maintenance of high professional are the essential requisite
for success of merchant bankers present scenario.

54
PROBLEMS OF MERCHANT BANKING
• SEBI guidelines have authorised merchant bankers
to undertake issue related activities only with an
exception of portfolio management.
• SEBI guideline stipulate a minimum of Rs 1 crore for
authorisation of merchant banker, small but
professional & specialised merchant bankers who
do not have Rs 1 crore may have to close down
their business.
• Non cooperation of the issuing companies in timely
allotment of securities, refund of application of
money is another problem of merchant bankers.
55
SCOPE OF MERCHANT BANKING IN INDIA
• GROWTH OF NEW ISSUES MARKET
The amount of annual average of capital issues by non
government public companies was only about 90 Cr in70’s,it
rose to 1000 Cr in 80’s,furher to 22,232.69Cr in 2009-10.
The number of capital has also increased from 516 in 1991-92
to 1,211 in 2005-06.
• DEVELOPMENT OF DEBT MARKET
The total amount mobilised through privately placed debt
securities in 2009-10 was Rs 67,790.46 Cr.
Hence development of debt market will offer tremendous
opportunity to merchant bankers.
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• ENTRY OF FOREIGN INVESTORS
Impact of increase in number of joint ventures abroad by Indian companies, rise
in FDI investment, indian capital market opening in 1992 , permitting indian
companies to directly tap foreign capital through euro issues.
• CHANGING POLICIES OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Impact of decentralisation, encouragement of small & medium industries,
changing emphasis policies of financial institutions from security orientation ,
corporate enterprises.
• DISINVESTMENT
The government raised Rs 2000 Cr through disinvestment of equity shares of
selected public sector undertaking in 1993-94.
The government proposal of shifting the present method of periodic sale of
public sector shares to round the year off loading of shares directly on stock
exchange from the year1995-96.

57
GUIDELINES OF MERCHANT BANKERS
• An initial authorisation fee, annual fee, renewal fee may be
collected by SEBI.
• All issues must be managed atleast by one authorised merchant
banker, the specific responsibilities of each lead manager must be
submitted prior to SEBI prior to the issue.
• Each merchant banker required to furnish to the SEBI half yearly
unaudited financial results when required by it with a view to
monitor the capital adequacy of the merchant banker.
• The lead merchant banker holding a certificate under category 1
shall accept minimum underwriting obligation of 5% of the total
underwriting commitment or Rs 25 lakhs whichever is less.

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• SEBI has prescribed a code of conduct to the merchant bankers.
• According to guidelines issued during aril 1990, professional qualification
in finance, law, business management, infrastructure like adequate office
space, equipment, manpower, employment of two persons who have the
experience to conduct business of merchant bankers, capital adequacy.
• SEBI revised guideline on December 22,1992 classify the activities of
merchant bankers as follows:

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• The first category consists of merchant bankers who carry on any activity
of issue management.
• The second category consists of those authorised to act in the capacity of
co-manager, advisor, consultant, underwriter to an issue or portfolio
manager.
• The third category consists of authorised to act as underwriters, advisor
or consultant to an issue.
• The fourth category consists of merchant bankers who act as advisor or
consultants to an issue.
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• SEBI has been vested with power to suspend or cancel the authorisation
in case of violation of the guidelines.
• It is obligatory relating to an issue particularly on
disclosure, allotment, refund, maintenance of books of accounts &
submission of half yearly report to SEBI.
• Inspections will be conducted by SEBI to ensure that provisions of the
regulations are properly compiled with & to investigate the complaints
from customers.
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MERCHANT BANK & COMMERCIAL BANK
• MERCHANT BANK
Activities include project counselling, corporate counselling in
areas of capital restructuring, amalgamations, mergers ,takeover,
discounting, rediscounting of short term paper in new issue
market, act as a broker, advisers on portfolio management in stock
exchange.
Their activities have impact on growth, stability, liquidity of money
market.
They are management oriented, they are willing to accept risk of
business.
Activities of merchant bankers is equity & equity related finance.
They deal mainly through fund raised through money market,
capital market.

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Continue….
• COMMERCIAL BANK
They are asset oriented, their lending decisions based on detailed credit
analysis of loan pruposals, value security offered against loan
They are risk avoider.
Hence they deal in debt& debt related finance like credit appraisal, loan
sanction .

63
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MUTUAL FUNDS & MERCHANT BANKING

  • 1. PRESENTATION ON MUTUAL FUNDS & MERCHANT BANKING PRESENTED TO:PROF. Premraj Alva PRESENTED BY:ANIKET SAWANT SUNEET HEREKAR SETH DIVISHA DINESH SHANTANU SHAHASANE RAVINDRA JADHAV PRATIK AWASARE SHRUTIKA KADAM VIVEK KOTHAWALE ADITI JOSHI
  • 2. ROLL NO. NAMES 131 PRIYANKA R. MERUGU 133 ANIKET V. SAWANT 134 SUNEET S. HEREKAR 135 SETH DIVISHA DINESH 136 SHANTANU R. SHAHASANE 137 RAVINDRAT. JADHAV 138 PRATIK S. AWASARE 139 SHRUTIKA S. KADAM 140 VIVEK V. KOTHAWALE 141 ADITI A. JOSHI TOPIC MUTUAL FUND & MERCHANT BANKING SLIDE NO.
  • 3. We would like to express my special thanks of gratitude to my Prof. Premraj Alva Sir, who gave us golden opportunity to do this wonderful project on the topic “MUTUAL FUNDS & MERCHANT BANKING”. While studying this project we gained lot of knowledge and information. Secondly we would also like to thank to our friends who helped to finish this project within the limited time. We have made this project not only for marks but also to increase our knowledge. Thank you one and all.
  • 4. CONCEPT AND HISTORY OF MUTUAL FUNDS HOW MUTUAL FUNDS WORK WHAT THEY ARE TYPES OF MUTUAL FUNDS IMPORTANCE OF MUTUAL FUND  RISK FACTOR SEBI GUIDELINES FACILITIES AVAILABLE TO INVESTORS SELECTION OF FUND REASONS FOR SLOW GROWTH BENCHMARKING LIST OF MUTUAL FUNDS COMPANIES IN INDIA HISTORY OF MERCHANT BANKING SERVICES OF MERCHANT BANK QUALITIES REQUIRED OF MERCHANT BANKERS PROBLEMS OF MERCHANT BANKING SCOPE OF MERCHANT BANKING IN INDIA GUIDELINES OF MERCHANT BANKERS 1 MERCHANT BANK & COMMERCIAL BANK
  • 5. Let us understand the concept of a Mutual Fund 2
  • 6. Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800 Only Rs. 3000 to invest Imagine an investor who has only Rs. 3000 to invest. How does he invest in all the major stock such that he creates diversified portfolio 3
  • 7. Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800 There could be many such investor- who have small capital amounts to invest they can not buy stock diversified manner Only Rs. 3000 to invest 4
  • 8. Enter The Fund Manger 5
  • 9. The fund manger walks in now. He pools in the money of all the investors Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800 Total Rs. 9000 to invest 6
  • 10. With the pooled money he buys the shares available Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800 Buy each share of Infosys, SBI, L & T And Grasim Amount to invest = Rs. 9000 Amount to invest = Rs. 2700 Rs. 2100 Rs. 1400 Rs. 2800 ___________ Rs. 9000 7
  • 11. Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs. 2800 The investors put together hold 1 share each of Infosys, SBI, L & T And Grasim. Effectively, each of them hold 0.33 shares of each company 8
  • 12. This is the concept of mutual fund. Investors combine to pool their money and invest in a fund- whose manager then invests into securities on their behalf. Each investors thus gets benefit of being able to create a diversified portfolio even while investing smaller amounts Stock Price  Infosys Rs.2700  SBI Rs.2100  L&T Rs.1400  Grasim Rs 2800 9
  • 13. • A Mutual Fund is trust that pools savings of number of investors who share a common financial goal. • The money thus collected is then invested in capital market instrument such as shares, debentures and other securities • The income earned through these investments and capital appreciation realized are shared by its unit holders in proportion to the number of units owned by them 10
  • 14. History of Mutual Funds  First Phase - 1964-87 Unit Trust of India (UTI) was established on 1963 by an Act of Parliament. It was set up by the Reserve Bank of India and functioned under the Regulatory and administrative control of the Reserve Bank Of India. At the end of 1988 UTI had Rs.6,700 crores of assets under management.  Second Phase - 1987-1993 (Entry of Public Sector Funds) Entry of non-UTI mutual funds. SBI Mutual Fund was the first followed by Canrabank Mutual Fund (Dec 87), Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund (Aug 89), Indian Bank Mutual Fund (Nov89), Bank of India (Jun 90), Bank of Baroda Mutual Fund (Oct 92). LIC in 1989 and GIC in 1990.The end of 1993 marked Rs.47,004 as assets under management. 11
  • 15.  Third Phase - 1993-2003 (Entry of Private Sector Funds) With the entry of private sector funds in 1993, a new era started in the Indian mutual fund Industry, giving the Indian investors a wider choice of fund families. Also, 1993 was the year in which the first Mutual Fund Regulations came into being, under which all mutual funds, except UTI were to be registered and governed. The Kothari Pioneer (now merged with Franklin Templeton) was the first private sector mutual fund registered in July 1993. The 1993 SEBI (Mutual Fund) regulations were substituted by a more comprehensive and Revised mutual fund regulations in 1996. The industry now functions under the SEBI (mutual Fund) regulations 1996.The number of mutual fund houses went on increasing, with many foreign mutual funds setting up funds in India and also the industry has witnessed several mergers and acquisitions. As at the end of January 2003, there were 33 mutual funds with total assets of Rs. 1,21,805 crores. The unit trust of India with rs.44,541 crores of assets under management was way ahead of other mutual funds.  Fourth Phase - since February 2003 There have been several amalgamation of mutual funds. The mutual fund have also become popular among retail investors. There were 28 mutual funds operating in India in April, 2005 12
  • 16. How Mutual Funds Work WHAT THEY ARE • A mutual fund is a company that pools money from many investors and invests the money in stocks, bonds, short-term money-market instruments, other securities or assets, or some combination of these investments. • The combined holdings the mutual fund owns are known as its portfolio. Each share represents an investor’s proportionate ownership of the fund’s holdings and the income those holdings generate 13
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  • 18. Types of Mutual funds On the basis of execution & operation Close-ended funds On the basis of yield & investment pattern Open-ended funds Income Growth Balance Specialised Money Taxation Leveraged Dual Index Funds Fund Funds Bonds Aggressive Funds Market Funds Funds Funds Funds Funds Growth Mutual Funds Funds 15 Offshore Mutual Funds Property funds Funds Of Funds Real Estate Mutual Funds
  • 19. Types of Mutual funds On the basis of execution & operation 16
  • 20. CLOSE ENDED FUND Close ended funds are funds which have definite period or target amount Once the period is over and or the target is reached, the door is closed for the investors. They cannot purchase any more units. These units are publicly traded through stock exchange and generally, there is no repurchase facility by the fund. The main objective of this fund is capital appreciation. Thus after the expiry of the fixed period, the entire corpus is disinvested and the proceeds are distributed to the various unit holders in proportion to their holding. Thus the fund ceases to be a fund, after the final distribution. E.g. UTI Master Share, 1986. 17
  • 21. OPEN ENDED FUND Open ended funds are those which have no fixed maturity periods. Open ended scheme consists of mutual funds which sell the units to the public. These mutual funds can also repurchase the units. Initial Public Offer (IPO) is open for a period of 30 days and then reopens as an open-ended scheme after a period not exceeding 30 days from the date of closure of the IPO. Investors can buy or repurchase units at net asset value or net value related prices, as decided by the mutual fund. Example: Unit Trust of India‘s Growth. 18
  • 22. DIFFERENCE CLOSE ENDED • Close-ended schemes have fixed maturity periods. Investors can buy into these funds during the period when these funds are open in the initial issue. • After that such schemes can not issue new units except in case of bonus or rights issue. However, after the initial issue, you can buy or sell units of the scheme on the stock exchanges where they are listed. • The market price of the units could vary from the NAV of the scheme due to demand and supply factors, investors’ expectations and other market factors 19 OPEN ENDED • These schemes have unlimited capitalization, openended schemes do not have a fixed maturity, there is no cap on the amount you can buy from the fund and the unit capital can keep growing. • These funds are not generally listed Any time exit option, The issuing company directly takes the responsibility of providing an entry and an exit. • This provides ready liquidity to the investors and avoids reliance on transfer deeds, signature verifications and bad deliveries. • Any time entry option, An open-ended fund allows one to enter the fund at any time and even to invest at regular intervals. on any exchange.
  • 23. Types of Mutual funds On the basis of yield & investment pattern 20
  • 24. 1. INCOME FUND 21 Income funds are those which generate regular income to the members on a periodical basis. It concentrates more on the distribution of regular income and it also sees that the average return is higher than that of the income from bank deposits. The investor is assured of regular income at periodical intervals The main objective is to declare regular dividends and not capital appreciation. The investment pattern is towards high and fixed income yielding securities It is concerned with short run gains only.
  • 25. 2. GROWTH FUND Growth are those which concentrate mainly on long term gains i.e., capital appreciation. Hence they are termed as “Nest Eggs” investments. It aims at meeting the investors‘ need for capital appreciation. The investor‘s strategy conforms to investing the funds on equities with high growth potential. The Investment tries to get capital appreciation by taking much risks and investing on risk bearing equities and high growth equity shares. The fund declares dividends. e. It is best suited to salaried and business people 22
  • 26. 3. BALANCE FUND 4. SPECIALISED FUNDS It is a balance between income and growth fund. This is called as Income-cum-growth. It aims at distributing regular income as well as capital appreciation. Thus the investments are made in high growth equity shares and also the fixed income earning securities. These are special funds to meet specific needs of specific categories of people like pensioners, widows etc 23
  • 27. 5. MONEY MARKET MUTUAL FUND • The funds are invested in money market instruments. • These funds basically have all the features of open ended funds but they invest in highly liquid and safe securities like commercial paper, bankers‘ acceptances, and certificates of deposits treasury bills. • These funds are called ―money funds‖ in the U.S.A. The RBI has fixed the minimum amount of investment as Rs.1 Lakh, it is out of the reach of many small investors. • However, the private sector funds have been permitted to deal in money market mutual funds. It is best suited to institutional investors like banks and other financial institutions. 24
  • 28. 6. TAXATION FUND It is a fund which offers tax rebated to the investors either in the domestic or foreign capital market.  It is suitable to salaried people who want to enjoy tax rebates particularly during the month of February and March.  An investor is entitled to get 20% rebated in Income Tax for investments made under this fund subject to a maximum investment of Rs.10,000 per annum. E.g. Tax Saving Magnum of SBI Capital Market Limited. 25
  • 29. 7. Leveraged Funds Also called as borrowed funds as the are used primarily to increase the size of the value of portfolio of a mutual funds. When the value increases, the earning capacity of the fund also increases. 8. Dual Funds It is a fund which gives a single investment opportunity for two different types of investors. It sells income shares and capital. Those investors who seek current investment income can purchase incomes shares. The capital shares receive all the capital gains earned on those shares and they are not entitled to receive any dividend of any type. 26
  • 30. 9. Index Fund It is a fund based the some broad market index. This is done by holding securities in the same proportion as the index itself. The value of these index linked funds will automatically go up whenever the market index goes up and vice versa. 10. Bond Funds The funds have portfolios consisting mainly of fixed income securities like bonds. The main thrust is income rather than capital gains. 27
  • 31. 11. Aggressive Growth Funds 12. Off shore Mutual Funds These funds are capital gains oriented and thus the thrust area of these funds is capital gains. Hence, these funds are generally invested in speculative stocks They may also use specialized investment techniques like short term trading, option writing etc., 28 These funds are meant for non resident investors. These funds facilitate flow of funds across different countries, with free and efficient movement of capital for investment and repatriation. 13.Property Fund These funds are real estate mutual funds. Its investment also includes shares/bonds of companies involved in real estate and mortgage backed companies
  • 32. 14.Fund of Funds It is a fund that invests in other mutual fund schemes. The concept in prevalent in abroad. 15. Real Estate Mutual Funds 29 The real estate mutual funds scheme is mutual funds scheme with the investment objective of direct or indirect investment in real estate property
  • 33. IMPORTANCE OF MUTUAL FUND • TAX BENEFIT- Mutual fund do not deduct tax at source from dividends, mutual fund themselves are totally exempt from tax on all income on their investment. • SUPPORT CAPITAL MARKET- It provide sustainable domestic source of demand for capital market instruments , it provide valuable liquidity to capital market. • PROMOTE INDUSTRIAL DEVPT- It provide financial resources to the industries at market rate, it create a demand for these capital market instruments. • PROVIDE GREAT AFFORDABILITY & LIQUIDITY- It provide an attractive & cost effective alternative to direct purchase of shares ,units can be sold to the fund at the net asset value. • ACT AS SUBSTITUTE TO IPO- It also guaranteed a certain percentage of IPO’s by companies, allotment of shares is more or less guaranteed. • KEEP MONEY MARKET ACTIVE- It provide stability to share prices, safety to investors, resources to prospective entrepreneurs. • PROVIDING RESEARCH SERVICE- Investment is done purely on basis of thorough research, investor get the benefit of the research done by fund. 30
  • 34. Continue…….. • KEEP MONEY MARKET ACTIVE- It provide stability to share prices, safety to investors, resources to prospective entrepreneurs. • PROVIDING RESEARCH SERVICE- Investment is done purely on basis of thorough research, investor get the benefit of the research done by fund. 31
  • 35. RISK FACTOR Type of risk How the fund could lose money Country risk Foreign investment The value of a foreign investment declines because of political changes or instability in the country where the investment was issued. Credit risk Fixed income securities If a bond issuer can’t repay a bond, it may end up being a worthless investment. Currency risk Investments denominated in a currency other than the Canadian dollar Interest rate risk Fixed income securities The value of fixed income securities generally falls when interest rates rise. Liquidity risk All types The fund can’t sell an investment that’s declining in value because there are no buyers Market risk 32 Type of investment affected All types The value of its investments decline because of unavoidable risks that affect the entire market. If the other currency declines against the Canadian dollar, the investment will lose value.
  • 36. SEBI GUIDELINES 1. These Regulations may be called the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Mutual Funds) (Third Amendment) Regulations, 2013. 2 . They shall come into force on the date of their publication in the Official Gazette. 3. In the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996, ─ (I) in regulation 24, in clause (b), the following proviso shall be inserted, namely"Provided further that the asset management company may become a proprietary trading member for carrying out trades in the debt segment of a recognized stock exchange, on behalf of a mutual fund.“ 33
  • 37. Continue…. • (II) in regulation 26, in sub-regulation (2), the following proviso shall be inserted, namely• "Provided that where the sponsor or its associates hold 50 per cent or more of the voting rights of the share capital of the custodian, such custodian may act as custodian for a mutual fund constituted by the same sponsor or any of its associates or subsidiary company if: • (i) the sponsor has a net worth of at least twenty thousand crore rupees at all points of time; (ii) 50 per cent or more of the directors of the custodian are those who do not represent the interest of the sponsor or its associates; (iii) the custodian and the asset management company of a mutual fund are not subsidiaries of each other; (iv) no person is a director of both the custodian and the asset management company of a mutual fund; and (v) the custodian and the asset management company of a mutual fund sign an undertaking that they will act independently of each other in their dealings with the scheme." 34
  • 38. FACILITIES AVAILABLE TO INVESTORS • • • • • • • 35 ROLL OVER FACILITY LATERAL SHIFTING FACILITIES DIVIDEND SWEEP FACILITY SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWL PLAN REISSUE FACILITIES TRIGGER FACILITY REPURCHASE FACILITY
  • 39. Continue….. • ROLL OVER FACILITY At the time of redemption, the investor is given an option to reinvest his entire investment. • LATERAL SHIFTING FACILITY Some mutual funds permit the investors to shift from one scheme to another on the basis of NAV. • REISSUE FACILITY The unit brought from investor is again are being reissued to those who are interested in purchasing them. 36
  • 40. Continue….. • DIVIDEND SWEEP FACILITY Unit holder is given an option to sweep or invest the dividend earned in a scheme into any other open ended scheme • SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWL PLAN It is nothing but redemption at predetermined regular intervals at the option of unit holder. • REPURCHASE FACILITY The process of buying back units from the investor by fund is called repurchase facility. • TRIGGER FACILITY It is a facility where transaction is automatically triggered. 37
  • 41. SELECTION OF FUND • OBJECTIVE OF THE FUND Whether it is income oriented or growth oriented. • CONSISTENCY OF PERFORMANCE Consistency in performance is a good indicator of its investment expertise. • HISTORICAL BACKGROUND A good historical record could be a better horse to bet on the new funds. 38
  • 42. Continue….. • COST OF OPERATION In this case, prospective investors should scrutinise the expense ratio of the fund & compare it with others. • CAPACITY OF INNOVATION The efficiency of fund managers can be tested by means of innovative schemes. • INVESTOR SERVICING In this case the most important factor to be considered is prompt & efficient servicing. 39
  • 43. Continue….. • MARKET TRENDS A prudent investor must keep eye on stock market index, interest rate, inflation rate. • TRANSPERENCY OF FUND MANAGEMENT The success of mutual fund depends to a large extent on the transparency of the fund management. 40
  • 44. REASONS FOR SLOW GROWTH • DISPARITY BETWEEN NAV & LISTED PRICE Real dilemma for investor is disparity between NAV & listed price. • NO UNIFORMITY IN CALCULATION OF NAV There is no standard formula for the calculation of the NAV. • LACK OF TRANSPARENCY Mutual funds in India are not providing adequate information & materials to investors. 41
  • 45. Continue…. • POOR INVESTOR SERVICING Mutual funds have failed to build up investor confidence by rendering poor services. • TOO MUCH DEPENDENCE ON OUTSIDE AGENCY They don’t have their own research cell hence they have to depend on outside agencies for collection of data. • INVESTORS PSYCHOLOGY Lack of patience among investors retard the growth of mutual fund. 42
  • 46. Continue…. • ABSENCE OF QUALIFIED WORK FORCE Professional agents & intermediaries can build efficient management of fund. • OTHER REASON Lack of investors education in the country, unawareness of mutual fund industry etc. 43
  • 47. BENCHMARKING • Basis for choosing an Appropriate Performance Benchmark • The appropriate benchmark has to be selected by reference to: • The Asset Class it invests in. Thus, an equity fund has to be judged by from an appropriate benchmark from the equity market and so on. • The fund’s stated Investment Objective. • • • • 44 There are three types of benchmarks that can be used to evaluate a fund’s performance: Relative to the market as a whole. Relative to other mutual funds. Relative to other comparable financial products or investments options open to the investor.
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  • 50. HISTORY OF MERCHANT BANKING • 13th Century merchant bankers were traders of commodities and acted as bankers to the kings of European states. • They Financed the continental wars and coastal trades. • They lent their names to lesser known traders by accepting bills through which they guaranteed that the holder of the bill would receive full payment. • “Merchant Bankers” is a term of English origin. In its earliest form, it was “Merchants and Bankers.” It meant that a firm that began as merchant or trader extended its activities by offering credit to its clients. Thereafter, some firms gave up acting as goods merchants and concentrated on trade finance, securities, investment management and venture capital 48
  • 51. SERVICES OF MERCHANT BANK • CORPORATE COUNSELLING It involve various activities like project counselling, capital restructuring, project management, loan syndication, etc. • PROJECT COUNSELLING It involve preparation of project reports, appraising project reports with financial institutions or banks, deciding upon financing pattern etc. • LOAN SYNDICATION It refers to assistance rendered by merchant banks to get mainly term loan for projects. • POST ISSUE MANAGEMENT It consists of collection of application forms & statement of amount received from bankers, share certificate, screening application, refund orders, deciding allotment procedure. 49
  • 52. Continue….. • ISSUE MANAGEMENT It involve management of issues which include marketing of corporate securities, equity of shares, preference shares, debentures, etc. • MARKETING After SEBI approval the merchant bankers arrange a meeting with various entities like advertising agent, company representative, publicity campaign Merchant bankers have to ensure that the material is delievered to stock exchange at leas 21 days before the issue option & to brokers to the issue, branches of brokers to the issue, underwriters on time. • PRICING OF ISSUES According to SEBI guideline 1992 for capital issues have opened the capital market to free pricing of issues. 50
  • 53. Continue….. • UNDERWRITING OF PUBLIC ISSUE It is an insurance to the company which proposes to make public offer against risk of under subscription. • PUBLIC ISSUE THROUGH PROSPECTUS To bring out public issue merchant bankers have to coordinate the activities relating to issue with different government, public bodies, professional. They have to ensure that information required by companies act & SEBI are furnished in the prospectus. It is only after SEBI clearance, prospectus can be filed with registrar of the company. 51
  • 54. Continue…. • PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT It refers to investment in different kinds of securities such as shares, debentures, bonds issued by different companies & securities issued by the government. • MANAGERS,CONSULTANTS, ADVISERS TO THE ISSUE They assist in drafting of prospectus, application forms, completion of formalities under companies Act, appointment of registrar. SEBI guidelines insist that all issues should be managed by atleast one authorised merchant banker. In issues over Rs100 crores, upto 4 merchant bankers are associated could be associated as managers. 52
  • 55. QUALITIES REQUIRED OF MERCHANT BANKERS • Ability to analyse various aspects such as technical, financial, economic aspects concerning the information of an industrial project. • Knowledge about various aspects of capital market, trends in stock exchange, psychology of investing people, change in the economical & technological environment in the country. 53
  • 56. Continue…. • Ability to build up the bank-client relationship &live upto clients expectation with total involvement in project assigned to them. • Innovative approach in developing capital market instruments to satisfy the ever changing needs of investing public. • Integrity & maintenance of high professional are the essential requisite for success of merchant bankers present scenario. 54
  • 57. PROBLEMS OF MERCHANT BANKING • SEBI guidelines have authorised merchant bankers to undertake issue related activities only with an exception of portfolio management. • SEBI guideline stipulate a minimum of Rs 1 crore for authorisation of merchant banker, small but professional & specialised merchant bankers who do not have Rs 1 crore may have to close down their business. • Non cooperation of the issuing companies in timely allotment of securities, refund of application of money is another problem of merchant bankers. 55
  • 58. SCOPE OF MERCHANT BANKING IN INDIA • GROWTH OF NEW ISSUES MARKET The amount of annual average of capital issues by non government public companies was only about 90 Cr in70’s,it rose to 1000 Cr in 80’s,furher to 22,232.69Cr in 2009-10. The number of capital has also increased from 516 in 1991-92 to 1,211 in 2005-06. • DEVELOPMENT OF DEBT MARKET The total amount mobilised through privately placed debt securities in 2009-10 was Rs 67,790.46 Cr. Hence development of debt market will offer tremendous opportunity to merchant bankers. 56
  • 59. Continue…….. • ENTRY OF FOREIGN INVESTORS Impact of increase in number of joint ventures abroad by Indian companies, rise in FDI investment, indian capital market opening in 1992 , permitting indian companies to directly tap foreign capital through euro issues. • CHANGING POLICIES OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS Impact of decentralisation, encouragement of small & medium industries, changing emphasis policies of financial institutions from security orientation , corporate enterprises. • DISINVESTMENT The government raised Rs 2000 Cr through disinvestment of equity shares of selected public sector undertaking in 1993-94. The government proposal of shifting the present method of periodic sale of public sector shares to round the year off loading of shares directly on stock exchange from the year1995-96. 57
  • 60. GUIDELINES OF MERCHANT BANKERS • An initial authorisation fee, annual fee, renewal fee may be collected by SEBI. • All issues must be managed atleast by one authorised merchant banker, the specific responsibilities of each lead manager must be submitted prior to SEBI prior to the issue. • Each merchant banker required to furnish to the SEBI half yearly unaudited financial results when required by it with a view to monitor the capital adequacy of the merchant banker. • The lead merchant banker holding a certificate under category 1 shall accept minimum underwriting obligation of 5% of the total underwriting commitment or Rs 25 lakhs whichever is less. 58
  • 61. Continue.. • SEBI has prescribed a code of conduct to the merchant bankers. • According to guidelines issued during aril 1990, professional qualification in finance, law, business management, infrastructure like adequate office space, equipment, manpower, employment of two persons who have the experience to conduct business of merchant bankers, capital adequacy. • SEBI revised guideline on December 22,1992 classify the activities of merchant bankers as follows: 59
  • 62. Continue…. • The first category consists of merchant bankers who carry on any activity of issue management. • The second category consists of those authorised to act in the capacity of co-manager, advisor, consultant, underwriter to an issue or portfolio manager. • The third category consists of authorised to act as underwriters, advisor or consultant to an issue. • The fourth category consists of merchant bankers who act as advisor or consultants to an issue. 60
  • 63. Continue….. • SEBI has been vested with power to suspend or cancel the authorisation in case of violation of the guidelines. • It is obligatory relating to an issue particularly on disclosure, allotment, refund, maintenance of books of accounts & submission of half yearly report to SEBI. • Inspections will be conducted by SEBI to ensure that provisions of the regulations are properly compiled with & to investigate the complaints from customers. 61
  • 64. MERCHANT BANK & COMMERCIAL BANK • MERCHANT BANK Activities include project counselling, corporate counselling in areas of capital restructuring, amalgamations, mergers ,takeover, discounting, rediscounting of short term paper in new issue market, act as a broker, advisers on portfolio management in stock exchange. Their activities have impact on growth, stability, liquidity of money market. They are management oriented, they are willing to accept risk of business. Activities of merchant bankers is equity & equity related finance. They deal mainly through fund raised through money market, capital market. 62
  • 65. Continue…. • COMMERCIAL BANK They are asset oriented, their lending decisions based on detailed credit analysis of loan pruposals, value security offered against loan They are risk avoider. Hence they deal in debt& debt related finance like credit appraisal, loan sanction . 63
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