Investors Perception Towards Investment in Mutual Funds
Investors Perception Towards Investment in Mutual Funds
Investors Perception Towards Investment in Mutual Funds
ON
Submitted to
Submitted by Supervisor
DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT
I TANYA DHAMIJA Roll No. 1802717, hereby declare that I have undergone my
summer training at RAMAN DHAMIJA AND ASSOCIATES from 1st June 2019
__________________
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FACULTY DECLARATION
I hereby declare that the student Ms. TANYA DHAMIJA of MBA (II) has undergone
her summer training under my periodic guidance on the Project titled
INVESTORS PERCEPTION TOWARDS INVESTMENT IN MUTUAL FUNDS.
Further I hereby declare that the student was periodically in touch with me during
his/her training period and the work done by student is genuine & original.
________________________
(Signature )
(Ms. KAVITA)
3
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
TANYA DHAMIJA
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TABLE OF CONTENT
Declaration 02
Faculty Declaration 03
Acknowledgement 04
Review of literature 28
Research Methodology 32
Research design 35
Limitations 36
Findings 53
Conclusion 54
Recommendation 55
References 56
5
LIST OF TABLES
5. Factors affecting 40
investment
6. Awareness regarding funds 41
9. Mode of investment 44
6
LIST OF FIGURES
7
14. Fund preference chart 46
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INTRODUCTION
1.1 INTRODUCTION
A mutual fund is a professionally-managed form of collective investments that
pools money from many investors and invests it in stocks, bonds, short-term
money market instruments, and/or other securities. In a mutual fund, the fund
manager, who is also known as the portfolio manager, trades the fund's underlying
securities, realizing capital gains or losses, and collects the dividend or interest
income. The investment proceeds are then passed along to the individual investors.
The value of a share of the mutual fund, known as the net asset value per share
(NAV) is calculated daily based on the total value of the fund divided by the
number of shares currently issued and outstanding.
Mutual fund is a trust that pools the savings of a number of investors who share a
common financial goal. This pool of money is invested in accordance with a stated
objective. The joint ownership of the fund is thus “Mutual” i.e. the fund belongs to
all investors. The money thus collected is then invested in capital market
instruments such as shares, debentures and other securities. The income earned
through these investments and the capital appreciations realized are shared by its
unit holders in proportion the number of units owned by them. Thus a Mutual Fund
is the most suitable investment for the common man as it offers an opportunity to
invest in a diversified, professionally managed basket of securities at a relatively
low cost.
A Mutual Fund is an investment tool that allows small investors access to a well-
diversified portfolio of equities, bonds and other securities. Each shareholder
participates in the gain or loss of the fund. Units are issued and can be redeemed as
needed. The fund’s Net Asset value (NAV) is determined each day.
When an investor subscribes for the units of a mutual fund, he becomes part owner
of the assets of the fund in the same proportion as his contribution amount put up
with the corpus (the of the scheme. NAV is defined as the market value of the
Mutual Fund scheme's assets net of its liabilities. NAV of a scheme is calculated
by dividing the market value of scheme's assets by the total number of units issued
to the investor’s total amount of the fund). Mutual Fund investor is also known as a
mutual fund shareholder or a unit holder. Any change in the value of the
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investments made into capital market instruments (such as shares, debentures etc)
is reflected in the Net Asset Value (NAV).
The main reason the number of retail mutual fund investors remains small is that
nine in ten people with incomes in India do not know that mutual funds exist. But
once people are aware of mutual fund investment opportunities, the number who
decide to invest in mutual funds increases to as many as one in five people. The
trick for converting a person with no knowledge of mutual funds to a new Mutual
Fund customer is to understand which of the potential investors are more likely to
buy mutual funds and to use the right arguments in the sales process that customers
will accept as important and relevant to their decision.
This Project gave me a great learning experience and at the same time it gave me
enough scope to implement my analytical ability. The analysis and advice
presented in this Project Report is based on market research on the saving and
investment practices of the investors and preferences of the investors for
investment in Mutual Funds. This Report will help to know about the investors’
Preferences in Mutual Fund means Are they prefer any particular Asset
Management Company (AMC), Which type of Product they prefer, Which Option
(Growth or Dividend) they prefer or Which Investment Strategy they follow
(Systematic Investment Plan or One time Plan). This Project as a whole can be
divided into two parts.
The first part gives an insight about Mutual Fund and its various aspects, the
Company Profile, Objectives of the study, Research Methodology. One can have a
brief knowledge about Mutual Fund and its basics through the Project.
The second part of the Project consists of data and its analysis collected through
survey done on 100 people. For the collection of Primary data I made a
questionnaire and surveyed of 100 people. This Project covers the topic
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“INVESTORS PERCEPTION ABOUT INVESTMENT IN MUTUAL FUND.”
The data collected has been well organized and presented.
When an investor subscribes for the units of a mutual fund, he becomes part owner
of the assets of the fund in the same proportion as his contribution amount put up
with the corpus (the of the scheme. NAV is defined as the market value of the
Mutual Fund scheme's assets net of its liabilities. NAV of a scheme is calculated
by dividing the market value of scheme's assets by the total number of units issued
to the investor’s total amount of the fund). Mutual Fund investor is also known as a
mutual fund shareholder or a unit holder. Any change in the value of the
investments made into capital market instruments (such as shares, debentures etc)
is reflected in the Net Asset Value (NAV).
The origin of Mutual Fund industry in India is with the introduction of the concept
of mutual fund by UTI in the year 1963. Though the growth was slow, but it
accelerated from the year 1987 when non-UTI players entered the industry. In the
past decade, Indian Mutual Fund industry had seen dramatic improvements, both
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quality wise as well as quantity wise. Before, the Monopoly of the Market had seen
an ending phase; the Assets under Management (AUM) were Rs. 67bn. The private
sector entry to the fund family raised the AUM to Rs. 470bn in March 1993 and till
April 2004; it reached the height of 1,540 bn. Putting the AUM of the Indian
Mutual Funds Industry into comparison, the total of it is less than the deposits of
SBI alone, constitute less than 11% of the total deposits held by the Indian banking
industry. The main reason of its poor growth is that the Mutual Fund industry in
India is new in the country. Large sections of Indian investors are yet to be
intellectuated with the concept. Hence, it is the prime responsibility of all mutual
fund companies, to market the product correctly abreast of selling. The Mutual
Fund industry can be broadly put into four phases according to the development of
the sector. Each phase is briefly described as under.
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(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.
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Figure 1
Open-ended funds: Investors can buy and sell the units from the fund, at any
point of time.
Close-ended funds: These funds raise money from investors only once.
Therefore, after the offer period, fresh investments cannot be made into the fund.
Equity funds: These funds invest in equities and equity related instruments. With
fluctuating share prices, such funds show volatile performance, even losses.
However, short term fluctuations in the market, generally smoothens out in the
long term, thereby offering higher returns at relatively lower volatility. At the same
time, such funds can yield great capital appreciation as, historically, equities have
outperformed all asset classes in the long term. Hence, investment in equity funds
should be considered for a period of at least 3-5 years. It can be further classified
as:
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i) Index funds- In this case a key stock market index, like BSE Sensex or
Nifty is tracked. Their portfolio mirrors the benchmark index both in
terms of composition and individual stock weight ages.
iii) Dividend yield funds- it is similar to the equity diversified funds except
that they invest in companies offering high dividend yields.
iv) Thematic funds- Invest 100% of the assets in sectors which are related
through some theme. e.g. -An infrastructure fund invests in power,
construction, cements sectors etc.
vi) ELSS- Equity Linked Saving Scheme provides tax benefit to the
investors.
Balanced fund: Their investment portfolio includes both debt and equity. As a
result, on the risk-return ladder, they fall between equity and debt funds. Balanced
funds are the ideal mutual funds vehicle for investors who prefer spreading their
risk across various instruments. Following are balanced funds classes:
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i) Liquid funds- These funds invest 100% in money market instruments, a
large portion being invested in call money market.
ii) Gilt funds ST- They invest 100% of their portfolio in government
securities of and T-bills.
iii) Floating rate funds - Invest in short-term debt papers. Floaters invest in
debt instruments which have variable coupon rate.
vi) Income funds LT- Typically; such funds invest a major portion of the
portfolio in long-term debt papers.
vii) MIPs- Monthly Income Plans have an exposure of 70%-90% to debt and
an exposure of 10%-30% to equities.
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FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED BEFORE SELECTING A MUTUAL
FUND:
1. Making Risk- adjusted returns comparison. By doing this the investor will know
whether the returns generated by the scheme have been adequately compensated
for the extra risk undertaken by the scheme.
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2. The investor depending upon his risk appetite and preferences should sub-
classify the schemes on the basis of the characteristics of the schemes, which may
be defensive or aggressive in nature.
5. The corpus size of the scheme is also of importance. A large corpus size firstly
denotes investor’s confidence in the scheme and its fund manger abilities over the
years and, secondly it allows the fund manager to diversify the portfolio, which
reduces the overall market risk.
6. Other factors like turnover rates, low expense ratio, load structure etc of the
schemes etc should also be considered before finally zeroing down on a scheme of
your choice.
7. The rankings undertaken by ICRA are an initiative to inform the investors- who
does not have the time or the expertise to undertake the analysis on their own-
about the relative performance of the schemes. It considers all important
parameters to arrive at a comprehensive rank with a view to help investors decide
the scheme which may suit their investment profile.
8. Although much neglected, the due diligence in selection of the right mutual fund
scheme is of utmost importance as an investor cannot move in and out of a
particular scheme on a regular basis, because of the high costs involved, and
investments made into a particular scheme should be looked on a long-term basis
as a wealth creation tool.
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5 EASY STEPS TO INVEST IN MUTUAL FUNDS
Figure 2
19
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Merits and Demerits of mutual funds:
MERITS:
3. Low Cost. If you tried to create your own diversified portfolio of 50 stocks,
you'd need at least $100,000 and you'd pay thousands of dollars in commissions to
assemble your portfolio. A mutual fund lets you participate in a diversified
portfolio for as little as $1,000, and sometimes less. And if you buy a no-load fund,
you pay no sales charges to own them.
4. Convenience and Flexibility. You own just one security rather than many, yet
enjoy the benefits of a diversified portfolio and a wide range of services. Fund
managers decide what securities to trade, clip the bond coupons, collect the interest
payments and see that your dividends on portfolio securities are received and your
rights exercised. It's easy to purchase and redeem mutual fund shares, either
directly online or with a phone call.
5. Quick, Personalized Service. Most funds now offer extensive websites with a
host of shareholder services for immediate access to information about your fund
account. Or a phone call puts you in touch with a trained investment specialist at a
mutual fund company who can provide information you can use to make your own
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investment choices, assist you with buying and selling your fund shares, and
answer questions about your account status
DEMERITS:
1. Professional Management.
Did you notice how we qualified the advantage of professional management with
the word "theoretically"? Many investors debate whether or not the so-called
professionals are any better than you or I at picking stocks. Management is by no
means infallible, and, even if the fund loses money, the manager still takes his/her
cut. We'll talk about this in detail in a later section.
2. Costs.
Mutual funds don't exist solely to make your life easier - all funds are in it for a
profit. The mutual fund industry is masterful at burying costs under layers of
jargon. These costs are so complicated that in this tutorial we have devoted an
entire section to the subject.
3. Dilution.
It's possible to have too much diversification. Because funds have small holdings
in so many different companies, high returns from a few investments often don't
make much difference on the overall return. Dilution is also the result of a
successful fund getting too big. When money pours into funds that have had strong
success, the manager often has trouble finding a good investment for all the new
money.
4. Taxes.
When making decisions about your money, fund managers don't consider your
personal tax situation. For example, when a fund manager sells a security, a
capital-gains tax is triggered, which affects how profitable the individual is from
the sale. It might have been more advantageous for the individual to defer the
capital gains liability.
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STRUCTURE OF MUTUAL FUNDS :
Figure 3
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THREE TIER STRUCTURE:
Sponsor
The sponsor is the promoter of the mutual fund. The sponsor establishes the mutual
fund and registers same with SEBI. Sponsor is required to contribute at least 40%
of the capital of the AMC.
Trustees
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INDUSTRY PROFILE
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2.1 History of mutual fund in India
The history of Mutual Fund Industry in India can be traced back to 1963, with the
launch of the Unit Trust of India by the Government of India under an Act of
Parliament. UTI was launched under the regulatory and administrative control of
RBI. In 1978, the regulatory and administrative control of UTI was transferred
from the Reserve Bank of India to IDBI (Industrial Development Bank of India).
The first mutual fund scheme that was introduced in India by UTI was in the Unit
Scheme (1964). UTI had Assets Under Management worth Rs. 6,700 Crores, by
the end of the year 1988.
In 1987, public sector enterprises such as State Bank of India, Punjab National
Bank, Canara Bank, etc. and other non-UTI segments such as General Insurance
Corporation of India (GIC) and Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) entered
the market and established public sector mutual funds. The funds introduced by the
public sector banks, by way of historic progression, are listed below:
SBI Mutual Fund
Canbank Mutual Fund
Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund
Indian Bank Mutual Fund
Bank of India Mutual Fund
Bank of Baroda Mutual Fund
From the year 1993 onwards, private sector funds were established in the mutual
fund industry. In the same year, Mutual Fund Regulations were introduced in India
under which all mutual funds except UTI has to be registered. The first private
sector mutual fund that was registered was the Kothari Pioneer Fund, which was
merged with Franklin Templeton later on. In 1996, the Mutual Fund Regulations
were revised and this substituted the earlier version.
In 2003, the Unit Trust of India Act 1963 was repealed and was divided into 2
separate entities – the UTI Mutual Fund, which is sponsored by Punjab National
Bank, State Bank of India, Life Insurance Corporation of India and Bank of Baroda
and the second entity is the Specified Undertaking of the Unit Trust of India. This
bifurcation was effective from February 2003.
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2.2 Growth of Industry
Mutual funds offer investors a means to get exposure to equities as well as other
capital market asset instruments. The mutual fund industry has grown
tremendously. Current assets under management (AUM) are INR 23.6 trillion; this
number was just INR 1 trillion in January 2000. Currently INR 7.9 trillion are
under management in equity schemes, up from INR 1.8 trillion 5 years back. In
January 2000, the AUM of equity funds stood at just 0.26 trillion. SIP inflows in
December 2018 were at INR 80 bn. The Indian economy has been resilient, IMF
forecasts growth for FY2019-20 to be 7.4%, which is a strong number. Though the
outlook has been clouded recently on account of a liquidity crunch following a
crisis in NBFC sector, however, we believe this is a temporary blip and the
economy should be able to overcome these headwinds. We feel optimistic about
the outlook for India for a couple of reasons.
2.3 Challenges
Firstly , the industry is still under penetrated . Technology has enabled us to reach
out to a larger audience via websites and apps but there is still a lot to be done. We
need to reach out to a farthest corners of the country and as an AMC , we continue
to expand our footprint via technology offerings or opening of branches in newer
underserved locations.
After 25 years , SIPs today have become synonymous with mutual funds and are
preffered way to invest.
Although equity remains the primary asset class for the retail investor , i believe
the next level of growth needs to come throough promoting the other side of the
coin i.e debt mutual fund scheme .
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REVIEW OF LITERATURE
28
Review of literature refers to the collection of the results of the various researches
relating to the present study. It takes into consideration the research of the previous
researchers which are related to the present research in any way. Here are the
reviews of previous researches related with the present study.
Kaswan, S. (2009)
The topic of project was mutual funds.. After the research works Mr. Shailendra
Kaswan concluded that mutual fund industry is enlarging its size in India investors
are willing pour money in mutual funds. Despite some temporary registrants, other
economic modes are in favorable mode. Thus we need proper management of
advisory services more schemes financial advisor and institution to cater the
market. Industry need to revise its business strategy. Investors perception is not
prioritized yet instead of completing target, advisors working under institutions
should consider the requirements of the investors. We need changing pattern of
selling mutual funds.
The topic was “A comparative study between mutual fund offered by various
companies in Indian market”. After analysis Mr. Vimal Joshi concluded that
Kodak opportunity fund is diversified aggressive fund and it is an open ended
equity scheme and he said that in this time of fund the risk is high. And in Franklin
flaxicab fund is also near about same as Kodak opportunity fund but in this fund
the returns of more than three AMC’s (HDFC, RELIANCE and HSBC). In
Reliance equity opportunity the return is medium compare to other AMC’s But in
HSBC core and satellite fund the return is low compare to other AMC’s. And
HSBC India opportunity fund is low risky fund.
The topic was a study of preferences of investors for investment in mutual funds
for the SBI mutual funds. Mr. Vikash Kumar concluded that most of the investors
don’t invest in Sbi mutual fund due to non awareness. And he adds that most of the
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investors of Patna had invested in reliance or UTI mutual funds and ICICI mutual
funds also has good brand position among them. And Sbi mf places after ICICI
mutual fund according to respondents. The most portfolios are equity second most
is balance and least prefers portfolio was debts portfolio. Most of the investors
don’t want to invest in sectored fund. And he observed that many people have the
fear of mf. They need information brand place and important role and SBI mf UTI
mf ICICI mf etc. are well non brand so they are doing well.
The topic was “A project report on comparison of various funds”. After analyzing
and studying Mr. Amit Yadav give the ranking to the fund on three yearly return
basis that DSPML equity via on first, kotak 30 is on second, and HDFC equity he
puts on third while he put Franklin India prima he put on fourth and on fifth he put
the TATA pure.
They conducted a study on awareness and acceptability of mutual funds and found
that consumers basically prefer mutual funds due to return potential, liquidity and
safety and they were not totally aware about the systematic investment plan. The
investors will also consider various factors before investing in mutual funds.
They have investigated two major types of funds that make more extensive use of
derivatives, global funds and specialized domestic equity fund and found that risk
and return characteristics of these groups of funds are significantly different from
funds employing derivatives sparingly or not at all and that fund managers time
their use of derivatives in response to past returns.
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They concluded that women are more conservative and takes less risk and
significant gender differences occur in investment preferences for health insurance,
fixed deposits and market investments among employees.
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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
32
RESEARCH: Research refers to a search for knowledge.
Collection of data
Organization of data
Presentation of data
Analysis of data
Interpretation of
data
33
CHARACTERISTICS
34
4.2 RESEARCH DESIGN
A Market Research was performed to find out the actuality from the investors
about what they think about the various Investment Options. It was done to find
out the investment patterns and behavior of the people i.e. how much they invest,
what are the reasons behind their investments, and where they invest.
Thus a questionnaire was devised to fetch the above mentioned information from
the investors. Most of the questions in the questionnaires were objective in nature
which helped the people to fill it with utmost ease.
a) Sampling procedure:
The sample is selected in a random way, irrespective of them being investor or not
or availing the services or not. It was collected through mails and personal visits to
the known persons, by formal and informal talks and through filling up the
questionnaire prepared
b) Sample size:
The sample size of my project is limited to 100 only. Out of which only 75 people
attempted all the questions
c) Sample design:
Data has been presented with the help of bar graph, pie charts, line graphs etc
35
DATA COLLECTION:
primary
secondary
Primary Data: It means the data which is collected for the first time.
Research is totally based on primary data. Secondary data can be used only for the
reference. Research had been done by primary data collection, and primary data
had been collected by interacting with various people.
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DATA ANALYSIS AND
INTERPRETATION
37
1.) INVESTOR AGE DISTRIBUTION
BELOW 30 years 10
BETWEEN 30-40 35
YEARS
ABOVE 40 30
Table 1
AGE
10
30
below 30 years
Between 30 to 40
Above 40 years
35
Figure 4
INTERPRETATION :
Out of 75 investors 10% investors are below the age of 30 years, 35% investors
are between 30-40 years 30% investors are above the age of 40 years.
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2.) INVESTORS QUALIFICATION
GRADUATION/ PG
55
UNDER GRADUATE 15
OTHERS 5
Table 2
QUALIFICATION
15
graduation
under graduate
55 others
Figure 5
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 investors 73% are graduate, 20% are under graduate & 6% are others.
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3.) OCCUPATION OF INVESTORS :
GOVERNMENT SECTOR
30
PRIVATE SECTOR 15
BUSINESS 20
AGRICULTURE 4
OTHERS 6
Table 3
OCCUPATION
30
25
20
15 30
10 20
15
5 6 OCCUPATION
4
0
Figure 6
40
4.) Customer preference about type of investment
FIXED DEPOSITS 20
INSURANCE 12
MUTUAL FUNDS 30
SHARES 2
REAL ESTATE 9
Table 4
KIND OF INVESTMENT
30 FDS
2
9 INSURANCE
MUTUAL FUNDS
11
SHARES
12 GOLD AND SILVER
2
20 REAL ESTATE
Figure 7
INERPRETATION:
41
5.) FACTORS AFFECTING WHILE INVESTING
LIQUIDITY 20
LOW RISK 10
HIGH RETURN 40
TRUST 5
Table 5
5
20
LIQUIDITY
LOW RISK
HIGH RETURN
TRUST
40 10
Figure 8
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 Investors 53.33% are investing due to high return, 13.33% are invest due
to low risk, 26.66% are investing due to liquidity & 11.11% due to trust .
42
6.) AWARENESS REGARDING MUTUAL FUNDS
AWARE 52
NOT AWARE 23
Table 6
AWARENESS
23
AWARE
NOT AWARE
52
Figure 9
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 investors 69.33% are aware of mutual funds and rest are unaware.
43
7.) MEDIUM TO KNOW ABOUT MUTUAL FUNDS
ADVERTISEMENT 8
PEER GROUPS 10
BANKS 48
FINANCIAL ADVISORS 9
Table 7
MEDIUM
60
50
40
30
MEDIUM
48
20
10
8 10 9
0
ADVERTISEMENT PEER GROUPS BANKS FINANCIA ADVISORY
Figure 10
INTERPRETATION:
Out of those who invest in mutual funds 64% knows about mutual funds through
banks, 12% from financial advisor, 10.66% are know through advertisement, &
13.33% from peer groups.
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8.) WHICH MUTUAL FUND TO SELECT WHILE INVESTING
HDFC 14
RELIANCE 25
KOTAK 6
Table 8
30 30
25 25
20
IN WHICH MF U HAVE
15
14 INVESTED
10
5 6
0
STATE BANK OF HDFC RELIANCE KOTAK
INDIA
Figure 11
INTERPRETATION:
45
9.) MODE OF INVESTMENT YOU WILL PREFER
SIP 43
Table 9
MODE
32
Figure 12
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 investors 57.33% are investing in SIP and rest investing in one time
investment.
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10.) INVESTED IN MUTUAL FUND
INVESTED 59
NOT INVESTED 16
Table 10
INVESTMENT
70
60
50
40
INVESTMENT
30 59
20
10
16
0
INVESTED NOT INVESTED
Figure 13
INTERPRETATION:
78.66% investors had invested in mutual funds and 21.33% hadn’t invested in
mutual funds
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11.) IN WHICH KIND OF MUTUAL FUND YOU WOULD LIKE TO PREFER
PUBLIC 51
PRIVATE 24
Table 11
PREFERNCE
24
PUBLIC
PRIVATE
51
Figure 14
INTERPRETATION:
32% investors prefer to invest in public mutual funds and rest likes to invest in
private mutual funds.
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12.) WHICH MUTUAL FUND SCHEME YOU HAVE USED ?
OPEN ENDED 38
CLOSE ENDED 37
Table 12
SCHEMES
38.2
38
37.8
37.6
37.4
37.2 38 SCHEMES
37
36.8
37
36.6
36.4
OPEN ENDED COSE ENDED
Figure 15
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 investors 38 investors had used open ended and rest 39 had used close
ended schemes.
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13.) WHICH PORTFOLIO IS PREFERRED BY INVESTORS
EQUITY 36
DEBT 15
BALANCED 24
Table 13
PORTFOLIO
40
35 36
30
25
24
20
PORTFOLIO
15 15
10
0
EQUITY DEBT BALANCED
Figure 16
INTERPRETATION:
Out of 75 investors 48% investors prefer equity portfolio ,20% prefer debt and
32% prefer balanced portfolio.
50
14.) WHAT ARE THE OPTIONS FOR GETTING RETURNS PREFERRED BY
INVESTORS
DIVIDEND PAYOUT 15
DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT 10
GROWTH 50
Table 14
RETURN
15
10 DIVIDEND PAYOUT
DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT
50
GROWTH
Figure 17
INTERPRETATION:
50 investors want to get return in growth and 15 in dividend payout and rest out of
75 want dividend reinvestment option as a return of their investment
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15.) HOW OFTEN YOU NEED REMINDERS ABOUT MUTUAL FUNDS
MONTHLY 50
HALF YEARLY 14
ANNUALL 9
QUARTERLY 2
Table 15
REMINDER
14
MONTHLY
2
ANNUAL
9 QUARTERLY
HALF YEARLY
50
Fig 18
INTERPRETATION:
Investors want 12%, 2.66%, 18.66%, 66.66% reminders about their investment in
mutual funds annually quarterly half yearly and monthly respectively.
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FINDINGS
According to my survey in Chd. , maximum numbers of investors falls in the
age group of 30-40 years. The second most Investors were in the age group of
above 40 years and the least were in the age group of below 30 years.
Graduate .
5) The most preferred Portfolio was Equity, the second most was Balance
(mixture of both equity and debt), and the least preferred Portfolio was
Debt portfolio.
7) Banks are the most preferred medium to know about mutual funds among
advertisement, peer groups.etc
8) Mostly investors had used closed ended schemes because under this funds
have fixed maturities and money cannot be withdrawal before maturity.
The Market Research performed gave an insight of the actual investors, their
investment behavior and their investment trends.
The research was carried out in the area of Chandigarh to find out various
parameters that governs the einvestors perception towards mutual funds. This
survey had identified the major parameters like liquidity, rate of return, market
share and various schemes etc. I was interested to find out how investment in
mutual fund gives different parameters of return, reminders etc.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
g. Younger people aged under 35 will be a key new customer group into
the future, so making greater efforts with younger customers who show
some interest in investing should pay off.
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REFERENCES
a. www.mutualfundsindia.com
b. www.bseindia.com
c. www.nseindia.com
d. www.investopedia.com
e. www.mutualfundsindia.com
f. www.fidelity.com
g. www.sbimutualfunds.com
h. www.bankbazaar.com
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