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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 02, 2001 |
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US-64: crisis of confidence
- Swami Vivekananda
THERE SEEMS to be a concerted effort from various quarters to
paint the Unit Trust of India in black. Suggestions that things
would not have come to such a pass if UTI had been privately
owned are being subtly made. But private mutual funds, barring a
few with oversees connections that stepped in a few years ago
with great fanfare have shown precious little by way of
performance. Hence, ownership cannot be a factor while assessing
the present situation in UTI.
Having said that, one has seen successive governments regarding
the capital market as the true barometer of their budgetary
wizardry. This thought influenced institutions like UTI to change
the basic composition of schemes like US-64 from being
essentially debt oriented to their being essentially equity
based.
As for investors from the corporate world, since they were
governed by the accounting standards that valued their holdings
at the lower of cost or market value in most cases, both of which
were above the underlying NAV - it suited them for the repurchase
price of the units to be placed at values above the perceived
NAV.
The Reserve Bank of India, the regulator for commercial banks,
prescribed the market quotes to be the basis of valuation rather
than the NAV for the units held by the banks. The repurchase
price was considered equivalent to the market rate.
One hears that many a battle went on in the board rooms of banks
when professionals preferred units being valued at their NAV but
banks got away because of RBI's prescription. In essence, it
suited both banks and corporates for the repurchase price to be
far removed from the perceived underlying NAV of the portfolio.
Again, it should be noted that it is the repurchase price that
indirectly determined the issue price.
True, there is no other instrument in the market that can
guarantee liquidity, decent return, capital appreciation and
safety as attempted by US-64. On the other hand, US-64 should
actually be looked at as being similar to index futures. US-64 in
the past protected the investor from the problems of bad delivery
and fake certificates. It also allowed the small investor to own,
at least indirectly, scrips which he could not afford on his own.
Besides, it has high hedging effectiveness without the investor
having to be a major player in the market. While it would have
been in his interest to have the units quoted at their NAV, as
seen earlier, it did not suit the banks and the corporates. His
voice was therefore a cry in the wilderness.
Even after the 1998 imbroglio, UTI continued selling repurchasing
units far above the NAV, akin to certain fly-by-night NBFCs which
used the moneys from fresh deposits to meet the matured ones.
That such a situation was allowed to go on should come in for
closer scrutiny, along with matters like Cyberspace.
There has also been talk of UTI coming under a regulator.
Regulators in the Indian context go in for a large number of
prescriptive rules which kill financial innovation. Further, the
attention gets shifted from risks to rules. Such prescriptive
rules also have a tendency to give the impression that they are
necessary, sufficient, reliable and more importantly desirable -
none of which is true.
The trouble now is that UTI may move to another extreme - what
Lewellyn describes as ``excessive efforts at internal compliance
for the fear of being challenged by the regulator.'' Such a move
if made would be far more disastrous to the organisation.
Being easily the most attractive of UTI's schemes, US-64 was used
time and again to mobilise funds, stretching the limit perhaps
too far. That was perhaps one of the problem areas, having
accumulated an unmanageable corpus of Rs. 70,000 crores in the
aggregate.
The media too failed in their duty. Timely alerts would have
provided information to small investors and at the same time
would have served as brakes to the management too. With
corporates and banks pulling out after smelling trouble, the
media, which is largely corporate controlled, should have warned
small investors but that was not to be.
Thus, the story of US-64 is one where the Government, the
management, the opposition and the media - all failed to act in
time. To blame the scheme for its inaction or the organisation is
to do gross injustice to the scheme itself.
To despair is easy, to decry is easier, to sow seeds of doubt is
the easiest but US-64 requires none of these; what it requires is
support and sustenance in the interests of the millions.
The new chief should be given the freedom and support to bring
back the scheme on its rails.
P. S. V. Chari & P. S. Narasimhan
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