srimca

srimca

Tuesday 9 September 2014

Systematic Investment Plan



What is a Systematic Investment Plan?

A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) is a vehicle offered by mutual funds to help investors save regularly. It is just like a recurring deposit with the post office or bank where you put in a small amount every month, except the amount is invested in a mutual fund.


Benefits of Systematic Investment Plans
Rupee-Cost Averaging
when the NAV is high the investor get lower unit and when the NAV is low the buyer get high unit.this is called rupee cost averaging

Power of Compounding

Albert Einstein once said, "Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it... he who doesn't... pays it." The rule for compounding is simple - the sooner you start investing, the more time your money has to grow.
 Disciplined Saving - Discipline is the key to successful investments. When you invest through SIP, you commit yourself to save regularly. Every investment is a step towards attaining your financial objectives.

Flexibility - While it is advisable to continue SIP investments with a long-term perspective, there is no compulsion. Investors can discontinue the plan at any time. One can also increase/ decrease the amount being invested.

 Long-Term Gains - Due to rupee-cost averaging and the power of compounding SIPs have the potential to deliver attractive returns over a long investment horizon.

 Convenience - SIP is a hassle-free mode of investment. You can issue a standing instruction to your bank to facilitate auto-debits from your bank account.

procedure in SIP
Ø  Initiating an SIP requires the investor to choose the scheme, frequency, term, and amount that he wants to invest in each instalment.
Ø  While first-time investors need to fill the mutual fund application form, along with the SIP enrolment form, the existing investors are required to fill only the latter.
Ø  Information: The investors need to furnish information such as SIP commencement date, frequency of investment, investment period, , instalment amount and details of payment
Ø  The above documents should be submitted to the AMC office, branch or investor service centre. The AMC usually takes 15-21 working days to process the documents and initiate the SIP.


Friday 5 September 2014

The Power Point Presentation of Ms. Ankita And Group for 2G Spectrum Scam










highlights of 2g spectrum






  • 85 firms suppressed facts, gave fictitious papers to DoT
  • DoT kept spectrum pricing issue out of GoM's purview
  • A Raja ignored Prime Minister's, FM's and Law Ministry's advice
  • Spectrum was rare national asset, should have been auctioned
  • 2G spectrum allocated to new players at throwaway prices
  • Undue advantage to Swan Telecom in allocation of spectrum
  • Email ID of Swan Telecom shown as that of a Reliance ADA group official
  • Spectrum allocated beyond contracted quantity to 9 firms including Bharti, Vodafone, Idea, BSNL, Reliance, Aircel
  • Idea and Spice not given spectrum on grounds of proposed merger- this was against the rules
  • Allocation of 2G spectrum led to loss of Rs. 1.76 lakh crore
  • DoT did not follow its own practise of first-come-first-serve in letter and spirit
  • Calculation of loss based on 3G auction earlier this year
  • Cut-off date for license letters advanced arbitrarily by a week
  • This went against time-tested procedures of government functioning
  • Entire process lacked transparency
  • Undertaken in arbitrary and inequitable manner





Wednesday 3 September 2014



The NSEL scam or NSEL fraud is a systematic and premeditated fraud perpetrated in the commodity market on the National Spot Exchange that is based in Mumbai, India.[1] The NSEL is a company promoted by Financial Technologies India Ltd and the NAFED (only 100 shares given for misusing the NAFED brand). The NSEL scam is estimated to be a Rs. 5600 crore (around US$ 0.95 billion) fraud that came out to light after the National Spot Exchange failed to pay its investors in commodity pair contracts after 31 July 2013
It was discovered after the exchange defaulted on 31st July 2013 that most of the underlying commodities did not exist and the buying and the selling of commodities like steel, paddy, sugar, ferrochrome etc. was being only conducted only on paper. The pair trades in various commodities were offered in one-day forward contracts of T+2 and T+25  (sometimes even T + 35) payment terms (bought and sold at the same time).
Such pair trades offered an arbitrage opportunity of about 12-15% return per annum. The investors, who honored the T+2 payment obligation, found that the National Spot Exchange neither had the money, nor the commodities, to honor their T+25 dues. Around 24 borrowers were given the funds by the NSEL, without any underlying commodity deposited by those borrowers. One of those borrowers who borrowed around Rs. 1000 crores is a company named NK Protein Ltd., and is owned by the son-in-law of the former Chairman Shankarlal Guru of NSEL.
An estimated number of 15000 investors, along with public sector units like MMTC and PEC, were victims of this NSEL scam. The ROC report on NSEL fraud has come down heavily on the promoters and the FTIL, as it was found that a majority of minutes of meetings of the NSEL board were fabricated, as cell phone location data of the said board members did not match to the meetings’ locations. Some of the warehouses mentioned on the NSEL website were found to be physically non-existent, and the SGF (Settlement Guarantee Fund) – of around Rs 839 crores (about US $140 Million), as on 29 July 2013, vanished into thin air.
Anjani Sinha, the sacked CEO and the MD of the company, attempted to take the blame for the fraud in order to exonerate other promoters, and filed an affidavit. Mr. Anjani Sinha's wife, Shalini Sinha, though being a related party, traded on MCX for about Rs. 40000 crores in one year through her company SNP Designs P Ltd. However Anjani Sinha after arrest retracted his earlier affidavit and filed a fresh affidavit pinning the blame on the board of NSEL stating that they fully knew what was going on at NSEL. Anjani Sinha in his police statement however claimed that his wife Shalini Sinha is a small garment designer and the trades done by IBMA under the name SNP Designs were actually speculative trades done on MCX by Jignesh Shah himself. He also claimed there was no financial dealing between IBMA and SNP designs whatsoever. Surprisingly Anjani Sinha whom the promoters blamed as the main culprit was kept with NSEL by Jignesh Shah for almost 12-13 weeks after the scam as a 'special office recovery' showing the collusion between the two.
The Economic Offences wing of Mumbai police finally arrested Jignesh Shah along with his trusted lieutenant Shreekant Javalgekar who were all along believed to be the masterminds of the scam on 7th May 2014 [8] As per Mumbai police the arrests were required as Jignesh Shah and Javalgekar did not cooperate in interrogations. They diverted questions and always laid the responsibility on the former NSEL CEO whle actually it was found that Jignesh Shah approved all fraudulent contracts. The immediate cause of arrest of Jignesh Shah was his knowledge of various dealings of Indian Bullion Markets Association (IBMA)a subsidiary of NSEL which was predominantly used in money laundering and bogus trades. The investors' counsel on 16th June 2014 produced before MPID court hard evidence of involvement of Jignesh Shah in the scam. Various emails sent among Anjani Sinha, Shreekant Javalgekar and Jignesh Shah were produced before the court where there was a talk about dehiring NSEL warehouses to remove cost burden, profit adjustment and bogus profits received from NK protein -one of the key borrowers at NSEL.
in the charge-sheet filed by Mumbai police it is confirmed that Jignesh Shah knew about the scam and was actually the mastermind of it. It was also found that a company close to Jignesh Shah withdrew all its investments just before the scam.


Tuesday 2 September 2014

NSEL Scam



The NSEL scam or NSEL fraud is a systematic and premeditated fraud perpetrated in the commodity market on the National Spot Exchange that is based in Mumbai, India.The NSEL is a company promoted by Financial Technologies India Ltd and the NAFED (only 100 shares given for misusing the NAFED brand). The NSEL scam is estimated to be a Rs. 5600 crore (around US$ 0.95 billion) fraud that came out to light after the National Spot Exchange failed to pay its investors in commodity pair contracts after 31 July 2013.
It was discovered after the exchange defaulted on 31st July 2013 that most of the underlying commodities did not exist and the buying and the selling of commodities like steel, paddy, sugar, ferrochrome etc. was being only conducted only on paper. The pair trades in various commodities were offered in one-day forward contracts of T+2 and T+25 (sometimes even T + 35) payment terms (bought and sold at the same time).
Such pair trades offered an arbitrage opportunity of about 12-15% return per annum. The investors, who honored the T+2 payment obligation, found that the National Spot Exchange neither had the money, nor the commodities, to honor their T+25 dues. Around 24 borrowers were given the funds by the NSEL, without any underlying commodity deposited by those borrowers. One of those borrowers who borrowed around Rs. 1000 crores is a company named NK Protein Ltd., and is owned by the son-in-law of the former Chairman Shankarlal Guru of NSEL.
An estimated number of 15000 investors, along with public sector units like MMTC and PEC, were victims of this NSEL scam. The ROC report on NSEL fraud has come down heavily on the promoters and the FTIL, as it was found that a majority of minutes of meetings of the NSEL board were fabricated, as cell phone location data of the said board members did not match to the meetings’ locations. Some of the warehouses mentioned on the NSEL website were found to be physically non-existent, and the SGF (Settlement Guarantee Fund) – of around Rs 839 crores (about US $140 Million), as on 29 July 2013, vanished into thin air.
Anjani Sinha, the sacked CEO and the MD of the company, attempted to take the blame for the fraud in order to exonerate other promoters, and filed an affidavit. Mr. Anjani Sinha's wife, Shalini Sinha, though being a related party, traded on MCX for about Rs. 40000 crores in one year through her company SNP Designs P Ltd. However Anjani Sinha after arrest retracted his earlier affidavit and filed a fresh affidavit pinning the blame on the board of NSEL stating that they fully knew what was going on at NSEL.  Anjani Sinha in his police statement however claimed that his wife Shalini Sinha is a small garment designer and the trades done by IBMA under the name SNP Designs were actually speculative trades done on MCX by Jignesh Shah himself. He also claimed there was no financial dealing between IBMA and SNP designs whatsoever. Surprisingly Anjani Sinha whom the promoters blamed as the main culprit was kept with NSEL by Jignesh Shah for almost 12-13 weeks after the scam as a 'special office recovery' showing the collusion between the two.
The Economic Offences wing of Mumbai police finally arrested Jignesh Shah along with his trusted lieutenant Shreekant Javalgekar who were all along believed to be the masterminds of the scam on 7th May 2014 As per Mumbai police the arrests were required as Jignesh Shah and Javalgekar did not cooperate in interrogations. They diverted questions and always laid the responsibility on the former NSEL CEO whle actually it was found that Jignesh Shah approved all fraudulent contracts. The immediate cause of arrest of Jignesh Shah was his knowledge of various dealings of Indian Bullion Markets Association (IBMA) a subsidiary of NSEL which was predominantly used in money laundering and bogus trades. The investors' counsel on 16th June 2014 produced before MPID court hard evidence of involvement of Jignesh Shah in the scam. Various emails sent among Anjani Sinha, Shreekant Javalgekar and Jignesh Shah were produced before the court where there was a talk about dehiring NSEL warehouses to remove cost burden, profit adjustment and bogus profits received from NK protein -one of the key borrowers at NSEL.
in the charge-sheet filed by Mumbai police it is confirmed that Jignesh Shah knew about the scam and was actually the mastermind of it. It was also found that a company close to Jignesh Shah withdrew all its investments just before the scam.