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July 9, 2010

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) Innovations – MOSt Shares M50 ETF

Global Journey
ETFs have travelled a long distance since its inception in 1993 in USA. It took 7 years (from 1993 – 2000) to get it widely accepted among investors. Once it drew attention from investors, it grew leap and bound; the global ETF assets has reached an all time high of US $ 1.03 trillion as on March 2010 from an estimated US $ 463 million in 1993, clocking a CAGR of 56 per cent. On US Exchanges, 11 out of top 25 volume leaders/stocks are ETFs. Some of the top volume leader ETFs is SPDRs, iShares MSCI Brazil Index, Ultra Short Russel2000 ProShares, etc. These ETFs account for 78 per cent of total volume out of top 25 traded stocks on US Stock Exchanges. It was less than 25 per cent 10 years back.


Indian Journey
Not very old in India, ETFs started its journey in 2001 after Benchmark AMC forayed into this unique proposition. Since then, the ETFs grew by leap and bound. The domestic ETF assets grew from Rs. 7 crore in 2001 to Rs. 3,203 crore as on May 31, 2010. However, the main course of action in ETFs got intensified in the recent bull period. Indian equities component of Global Emerging Markets ETFs account for US $ 5.5 billion of AUM while the domestic equity ETFs now account for US $ 0.5 billion. Overall, over the past year, around 20 per cent of the net inflows into the Indian market have come from ETFs, thereby, ETFs a very significant component of Indian fund flows.


Is ETFs good for investors?
The global historical data suggests that the fund managers have not been able to beat the benchmarks constantly over a longer period. In efficient market scenario, the active funds find difficulty in beating their benchmarks. So, it is always preferable for investors to look for a product which provide a decent return, at least comparable to its benchmark with bounty of other benefits such as tax efficiency, low expense ratios.
ETFs are pools of stocks, bonds or in a few instances other types of investments such as Gold that you can trade like stocks. ETFs tend to have very low annual expenses – much lower than the actively managed funds. Moreover, ETFs are high tax efficient i.e. they tend to minimize distributions, which will drive down your post-tax returns. ETFs are listed on stock exchanges and can be bought and sold like any other company share.


Product Innovations
Innovation is the key to success. For now, at least, all ETFs are an index fund which mirrors an index or a benchmark, unlike actively managed funds whose managers try to beat the market. There have been talk of companies bringing out actively managed ETFs, but so at least in India, it has not been manufactured. Currently, in India, the underlying for ETFs are Index, Sector, Money Market Instruments, Arbitrage etc. One more type to add in the basket of innovated products is actively managed ETF – MOSt Shares M50 ETF, the first of its kind in India, launched by Motilal Oswal Mutual Fund.
Passively-managed ETFs follows its index and invest in the same proportion as of its index while actively-managed ETFs follow their own fundamentally defined rules.






July 2, 2010

MOSt Shares M50 – Is it another offer in the crowd?

Recently SEBI’s Chairman C B Bhave commented if 3000 schemes flooded in the industry served a purpose to investors’ fraternity as they have failed to convince the investors of the long-term benefits of their products. He also suggested that the mutual funds should provide better returns by rolling out simpler products. Now coming to another zone where Mutual Funds continue to roll out new NFOs – HDFC Gold ETF, Peerless Income Plus Fund, MOSt Shares M50 ETF, Taurus MIP Advantage, Benchmark Short Term, Axis Triple Advantage and many Fixed Maturity Plans (FMPs). I have been wondering if I am an investor which one I should choose. As a simple investor, my aim should be to maximize returns with least volatility; also I should bear minimal costs.


Among the above captioned NFOs, all the NFOs were more or less similar to the existing plans offered by another fund houses; I found a unique offer by Motilal Oswal AMC with its maiden NFO MOSt Shares M50 ETF. Though the ETF concept is new in India and has not been well received by investors yet, ETFs are on high. Historically, it has grown exceptionally even in intermittent market. Let me give out in detail why MOSt Shares M50 ETF is unique and investors’ friendly.

Product Features

As claimed by Motilal Oswal Mutual Fund, MOSt Shares M50 ETF is India’s 1st fundamentally weighted ETF based on the S&P CNX Index (Nifty). Logically, it is the remixed version of Nifty 50. The fund house has created its own basket “MOSt 50 Basket”, intellectually owned by MOAMC and managed by India Index Services & Products Ltd. (IISL). The weights of stocks in MOSt 50 Basket will be decided by their pre-defined methodology based on stock’s fundamentals (ROE, Net Worth, Retained Earnings and Valuation).

The fund aims to generate investment returns with minimal costs and active investment style. With no entry and exit load, the investors get another opportunity in terms of liquidity. The fund manager will invest 95-100% of the money in MOSt 50 basket and the exposure to fixed income and money market instruments along with cash call will be restricted to 0-5% of the total money invested.

Investment Strategy

The fund has reworked the weights of stocks in Nifty based on its own defined fundamentals such as Return on Equity, Net Worth, Retained Earnings and Price. They have designed the capital allocation strategy of the MOSt 50 basket to reduce the risk associated with price volatility of individual constituents. The table 1 defines the basket classification of MOSt 50 Basket.
So, some of the companies will be more dominant than others based on the current methodology.



Back Testing

The fund has done the back-testing with current methodology for the last 3-year period and the portfolio has given an additional alpha (excess of returns over its benchmark, in simple terms) of 13.2 per cent. It has also beta value of 0.94 against Nifty beta of 1.

Should you buy?

As far as the ETF story is going on, it has been building up in India. People have started recognizing the importance of ETFs as fund managers have failed to outperform the benchmarks over a longer period. Moreover, this new ETFs, also called as active ETF scored over others and provide uniqueness in terms of simplicity and maximization of returns over a longer period.