Friday 21 June 2013

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Monday 10 June 2013

Indian rupee records low against US dollar...

Indian rupee hits a record low against the dollar on Monday, on growing demand for oil  among importers. The fall is the one more blow towards the growth story of India, one of the emerging economies and 3 rd largest in Asia.Analysts and traders will now watch for any possible intervention from the central Reserve Bank of India to stem any further weakening of the currency.

The weaker currency makes imports costlier, especially of foreign oil on which India relies heavily, and will stoke already high consumer inflation.
The RBI has a policy of not commenting on movements in the forex market and has a stated policy of intervening only to curb volatility.

Friday 7 June 2013

Investing in Gold: Here are some recommended methods

You can invest in gold through E-Gold, Gold mutual funds, Gold ETFs or gold bars and coins. Not to forget, many Indians buy gold jewelry that they will never use considering them as investment. Each of these has their own merits and demerits.

* E-Gold

Pros:

1. No recurring charges like expense ratio of mutual funds, ETFs involved.
2. Units as small as 1 gram can be redeemed for physical gold.
3. Greater price transparency.

Cons:
1. Separate trading account and demat account needed for trading in e-gold.
2. Not the best way to invest in terms of tax. It treated as physical gold for taxation.


* Gold ETFs

Pros
1. Units are backed by corresponding units of physical gold which are kept in secured vaults.
2. Returns close to that of e-gold.
3. Long term capital gains tax of 10% without indexation or 20% with indexation kicks in after 1 year. No wealth tax applies.

Cons:
1. Trading account and demat account needed for buying ETFs.

* Gold mutual fund
Pros
1. Through Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) of gold mutual funds one can affordably have disciplined investment in gold. One can invest as little as Rs 100 every month in gold funds.
2. Long term capital gains tax of 10% without indexation or 20% with indexation applies after 1 year. No wealth tax applies.

Cons
1. Expense ratio is higher than in gold ETFs.
2. Returns slightly lower than that of gold ETFs depending on fund’s performance.

* Physical gold

Cons
1. Banks charge premium is charged on gold bars and coins. Reselling them is difficult.
2. Storage costs and making charges involved. Issue of safety is also large.
3. Most unfavorable way in terms of tax. Long term capital gains tax of 20% with indexation applies only after 3 years of buying it. It attracts wealth tax.

Conclusion: If you own a demat account gold ETFs are the best form of gold investment for you. If you don't, choose gold mutual funds. E-Gold needs time to mature as a product and the separate account requirements are too demanding for those not accustomed to trading. While jewelry has value as consumption article, gold bars and coins should be avoided.


Thursday 6 June 2013

Not a Golden Chance...

 The RBI's efforts to contain gold imports by restraining credit for purchase of gold assets will hit the jewellery trade and encourage dependence on illegal sources. The policymakers should learn from the experience of clamping down on gold imports during the licence raj, leading to the emergence of powerful smuggling rings that endangered the country's security besides leading to a burgeoning black market in gold.

Government hikes import duty on gold to 8%. The government on Wednesday raised the import duty on gold to 8% from 6% in a bid to rein in import of the yellow metal and to help curb a yawning current account deficit. The basic custom duty on gold and platinum has been raised to 8% from 6% and changes come into effect immediately.