Showing posts with label mutual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mutual. Show all posts

23 May 2011

Sri Lanka Acuity Partners & Ceylon Guardian Investment Trust to Set up a Firm to Run Mutual Funds

22nd May 2011, www.lankabusinessonline.com

Sri Lanka's Acuity Partners, an investment bank, and Ceylon Guardian Investment Trust is setting up a joint venture firm to run mutual funds (unit trusts), targeting domestic and international markets.

The new firm called Guardian Acuity Asset Management, will launch funds which will invest in equity and fixed income, Guardian said in a statement.

Acuity Partners is a joint venture between Sri Lanka's Hatton National Bank and DFCC Bank. Ceylon ¬Guardian Investment Trust is part of the listed Carsons Cumberbatch group which manages 33 billion rupees including a Sri Lanka country fund based overseas.

"The post war economic development in Sri Lanka will see increasing per capita income and savings rates amongst the people which would translate to a demand of a wide variety of savings and investment options…," the firm said in a statement.

The firm said it wanted to structure investment products to match different risk and return profiles of savers.

Related Info :

NAMAL Acuity Value Fund Declares First Dividends

Guardian Fund Bets on Sri Lanka Banks, Retail, Leisure & Construction Sector Stocks

Sri Lankan Economy Grows Fastest in last Five Quarters. 6.2pct in Last Quarter

20 March 2011

Sri Lanka Unit Trusts Manage Rs22bn in Assets. Public Awareness a Must for Participation in the Economic Growth

20th March 2011, www.sundaytimes.lk,

Total assets under management in Sri Lanka's unit trusts, both open ended and close ended funds, encompass Rs. 22 billion; according to S. Jeyavarman, the President of the Unit Trust Association of Sri Lanka and the Chief Executive of National Asset Management.

Unit trusts are collective investments in a diversified portfolio of financial instruments, including shares, etc., similar to mutual funds, but where investors buy units in the trust. However, these are not as actively managed as mutual fund where fund managers buy shares, etc. Instead, the unit fund is more a trust with a set of existing assets, where units are bought and sold at prevailing market prices.

He further adds, in a statement to the Business Times, that these benefit the economy and the country because of their use "in capital market thus facilitating long term finance to corporate sector in the form of equity and fixed income capital". And that "it is important to note that the peoples’ savings are invested in long term assets vis a vis shares and create prospects for long term growth of capital.

By creating retirement savings through prudent investments for retirement, the dependency on the state welfare budgets could be reduced while making people to save for retirement from early stages of their career."

Mr. Jeyavarman also opines that unit trusts should grow in "awareness among the common man so that all households in Sri Lanka should participate in the growth of the economy and the capital market."

He also suggests that the industry is "looking forward for liberalisation of exchange controls for foreign individual and institutional investors to invest through the fund industry."

Further, he identifes the need to provide "proper distribution channels for (people) to conveniently invest and withdraw as and when needed. The industry is looking forward to work with banking and the finance sector to partner and take the products through their net work of branches. It is also necessary to provide proper advice on investment choices that they can make.

We are working with the Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka to make better awareness in this year through many initiatives."

According to Mr. Jeyavarman, unit trusts are a better option for the public than treasury bills and other financial instruments mainly because of the expertise of the unit trust fund managers, who "pick the right kind of securities with appropriate maturities for the investor in a unit trust.

Alternatively, the investor himself can buy a particular security on his own initiatives. He needs to monitor treasury bill maturities and re-invest again and again in the long term.

Similarly, if it is a share investment, he needs to understand the valuation and risk associated with such investments. The common investors neither have the time nor the knowledge to invest in these instruments. The unit trust provides the solution to achieve the needs of the nvestor while overcoming such constrains."

Additionally, contrasting unit trusts with investing directly in the shares; Mr. Jeyavarman notes that a "unit trust invests in both shares and other fixed income securities and there are specialised funds available to invest in both markets.

The stock market is always volatile for many reasons. One has to understand those reasons and act accordingly to succeed in the share investment.

However, the interest rate is moving down at this time and as a result equity and fixed income combination can give a better prospective return to all type of investors while their risk of investments are monitored. Investors who have not invested in shares may invest conveniently in shares through the unit trusts to gain in the medium to long term."

Further elaborating, he reveals; "We believe the investor need to buy shares regularly as market timing is a difficult exercise. When the stock market is down it so happens a majority of share prices goes down together. The investors need to approach their investments by regular saving schemes in the funds thus avoiding wrong market timing."

Related Info :

Union Bank Plans a Country Fund through NAMAL. Possibility of Listing is Singapore Explored

Sri Lanka Unit Trusts Attract Rs1.5bn New Funds in First Ten Months of 2010

06 October 2010

NAMAL Acuity Value Fund Declares First Dividends

05th October 2010, www.island.lk

NAMAL Acuity Value Fund (NAVF) – a ten year closed ended Fund declares a dividend of Rs.5/- per unit from its net realised income and realised gains for the period ending 31st August 2010, a press release from NAMAL Stated.

Being a pioneering effort to enable the public to buy and sell units in NAVF through the Stock Brokers, the units were listed at the Colombo Stock Exchange on 12th October 2009 and in the secondary market the units gradually picked up from its initial offer value of Rs.50.00 to Rs 102/- per unit on 21st September 2010 This is an increase of 104% in this period. Meanwhile, the Net Asset Value (NAV) per unit published by NAMAL on the last business day of each month shown a value appreciation from Rs 48.74 at the end of September 2009 to Rs.92.23 at the end of August 2010.

This dividend amounts to an yield of 10 percent to the original investors who bought units at Rs.50/- during the Initial Public offering (IPO) and 4.9 percent for investors who purchased units at the Price of Rs 102 that prevailed at the CSE on the 21st September 2010" said Mr.S.Jeyavarman, CEO of NAMAL.