Skip to main content

Laddering Investment Technique

Laddering helps you benefit from changing rates and make the most out of fixed income instruments


   Fixed income investors are having a tough time predicting the movement of interest rates. The Reserve Bank of India has raised rates nine times in the last 14 months. Banks and companies, offering fixed deposits, too, have raised rates several times.


Consider this: you earned 6-7% on a one-year bank deposit a year ago, while, today, you could get about 9% to 10% on the same deposit. However, the trouble is that nobody can predict what will happen to deposit rates in the next one to two years. To tackle such a tricky scenario, financial planners recommend a technique called laddering, which helps investors maximise returns from their fixed income portfolio, including fixed deposit, company deposit, debt mutual fund schemes and so on.

WHAT IS LADDERING

Laddering is an investment technique in which investors purchase multiple financial products with different maturity dates. Laddering helps avoid the risk of reinvesting a big portion of assets if the financial environment is unfavourable.
For example, say you have fixed deposits maturing in 2012 and 2015. Now, even if the interest rate drops in 2012 when one deposit comes up for renewal, half of the income is locked at higher rates until 2015. It is impossible for retail investors to predict the interest rates. That is why laddering helps optimise returns.

HOW LADDERING WORKS

When you invest in fixed income products such as fixed deposits, one of the risk you carry is that of reinvestment. Put simply, you are not sure whether you will be able to reinvest the amount at the same rate or a higher rate when the deposit comes up for renewal. This is a risk investors have to live with in every fixed income product — be it fixed deposits or bonds.


Typically, many fixed-deposit investors try to time the market. They wait for interest rates to peak before locking their deposits. They wish bulk of their money is locked in at the highest interest rates. But they lose out on returns, since, in the interim period, they may see money lying idle in their savings bank account, earning lower returns.


Even if they succeed in this technique, when their deposit matures, they have to accept the prevailing rates at that point of time, whatever they are. If you break your fixed deposit, then you end up paying a penalty and you again land in a tricky situation. Clearly it could be a catch 22 situation!


This is where laddering helps investors. You can use it with products like bank deposits, company deposits, post office schemes, bonds and fixed maturity plans of mutual funds. So you can create a ladder with a single product such as a fixed deposit (FD) or with multiple products. It is a technique of creating a staggered income ladder, one rung at a time. Suppose you want to invest . 3 lakh of your emergency funds for an indefinite time period. You are not sure which way the interest rates are headed in the coming years. If the interest rates go up, you investment will be locked in your current FD and you cannot benefit from the higher rates. On the other hand, if the rates were to go down you would be more than content to have the money locked in at higher FD rates. So the simplest ladder is investing . 1 lakh each in a one-year, two-year and a three-year FDs. While this is the simplest ladder, you can also combine different products based on your risk profile to get a higher return.


So, a good idea could be to invest in a one-year fixed maturity plan (FMP), where you are expected to get about 9% per annum. You can also go for a two-year company fixed deposit of a reputed company like Mahindra Finance (9.5% per annum) and a three-year bank fixed deposit, which could give you about 9.5-10% per annum. The example has been used to create a three-rung ladder, but you can also build a four, five or 10-rung ladder, depending on your risk profile and needs.

BENEFITS OF 'LADDERING


Typically, a ladder is setup to have one product mature at the end of every year, which is reinvested back depending upon the period. The maturing product gives you an opportunity to invest again, depending upon the then existing interest rate scenario.


Laddering is very useful for retired people who depend on interest income to meet their day to day expenses. Laddering can free up capital as and when required. This gives you access to funds in an emergency. A person may purchase a shorter-term deposit to meet any need for capital to fund his children's education and purchase longer-term fixed deposit for retirement spending. If you ladder your fixed income instruments, there will always be some amount of money that will mature every year or after the intervals you have planned, every six or even three months, for instance.


Laddering gives you optimal return with safety of capital and liquidity. By using this process over long periods, you should be able to average out your interest rates and get a good return from your fixed income portfolio.


You can create a ladder as per your needs. Today, a ladder can range from three years to 15 years depending on your needs and wishes, since you have retail bonds from SBI, which have a tenure of as high as 15 years. So if your child is say three years old and you need money regularly for his education, you could create a 15-year ladder.


To optimise your returns it would make sense to use a mixture of instruments. Depending upon your risk-return profile, you can choose from among several products. Today, you have bank fixed deposits, company fixed deposits, retail bonds from firms like SBI, Tata Capital, Shriram Transport Finance and L&T Finance, and even postal products like NSC and Kisan Vikas Patra. You can mix and match various products to create the best ladder. The disadvantage of laddering in a falling interest rate scenario is that it may not give you an interest payout as high as you would have got by investing the entire sum at the higher rate.


But the upside is that if interest rates fall, the overall return on your corpus will still be higher than the prevailing rate of return as there will be tranches invested at higher rates. So, over the longer term, the flow will be more even and predictable.


The constant maturing, however, does present reinvestment risk to investors in a falling interest rate environment.

 

Popular posts from this blog

JP Morgan launches Emerging Markets Opportunities Equity Offshore Fund

Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Application Forms Invest In Tax Saving Mutual Funds Online Buy Gold Mutual Funds Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300 JP Morgan launches Emerging Markets Opportunities Equity Offshore Fund    The new fund offer opens for subscription on 16 th June and closes on 30 th June. JP Morgan Mutual Fund today announced the launch of its open end fund of fund called Emerging Markets Opportunities Equity Offshore Fund. The fund will invest in an aggressively managed portfolio of emerging market companies in the underlying fund - JPMorgan Funds - Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund, says a JP Morgan press release. Noriko Kuroki, Client Portfolio Manager, Global Emerging Markets Team (Singapore), JPMAM said, "Emerging markets have been out of favour for several years, as growth decelerated and earnings struggled. However, in a world of globalisation, we believe that EM will eventually re-couple with DM, leading to the long-aw...

Nifty F&O

  1. What is a straddle? A strategy using Nifty options usually before a major event or when one is uncertain of market direction. Comprises purchase of a Nifty call and put option of the same strike price. Usually strikes are purchased closer to the level of the underlying index. 2. What is better ­ buying or selling a straddle? It depends.Implied volatili ty of options, or near-term expectations of price swings in an un derlier like Nifty , usually peaks before an event and falls when the outcome plays out ­ like Infy re sults in past years. However, once the event plays out, a sharp rise or fall in Nifty could result in price of the straddle rising ­ benefiting buy ers. But, normally , those who sell or write options charge hefty premiums from buyers in the hope that fall in volatility would ensure the options end out-of-the-money, hurting buyers. 3. So, do straddle sellers end up winning most of the time? Yes. That's invariably the case when market volatility is trending on the...

Jeevan Labh

 The Life Insurance Corporation of India has announced Jeevan Labh , its limited-premium, with-profits endowment plan .   It comes with a premium paying terms of 10, 15 and 16 years for corresponding policy tenures of 16, 21, and 25 years respectively. ----------------------------------------------- Invest Rs 1,50,000 and Save Tax under Section 80C. Get Great Returns by Investing in Best Performing ELSS Mutual Funds Top 10 Tax Saving Mutual Funds to invest in India for 2016 Best 10 ELSS Mutual Funds in india for 2016 1. BNP Paribas Long Term Equity Fund 2. Axis Tax Saver Fund 3. Franklin India TaxShield 4. ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund 5. IDFC Tax Advantage (ELSS) Fund 6. Birla Sun Life Tax Relief 96 7. DSP BlackRock Tax Saver Fund 8. Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund 9. Religare Tax Plan 10. Birla Sun Life Tax Plan Invest in Best Performing 2016 Tax Saver Mutual Funds Online Invest Online Download Application Forms For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 83...

L&T Long Term Infrastructure Bond 2012 Tranche 2 Application Forms

Application form for Tax Saving Long Term Infrastructure Bond     L&T Long Term Infra Bond Application form     Submit filled up application     Collection canter near you     --------------------------------------------- Invest Tax Saving Mutual Funds Online Mutual Funds Online   Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Application Forms from all AMCs Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Applications   ---------------------------------------------   How to apply to PFC Bonds? Apply for PFC Tax Free Bonds forms below Download PFC TAX Free Bond Application Forms Submit the filled up form to Collection canter near you How to apply to NHAI Bonds? You can download the NHAI Tax Free Bonds forms below Download NHAI Tax Free bond Application Forms Submit the filled up form to Collection canter near you        

Systematic withdrawal plan

  Start Systematic withdrawal plan Online Although an SWP gives you regular income and saves on taxes in the long term, you cannot open an SWP on a scheme where you have an ongoing SIP   iStockPhoto If you are planning to take a sabbatical from work or are retiring soon, you may be looking at different investment options that give a regular income. Usually, a lump sum is invested to get regular fixed amounts later. Popular products include post office monthly income scheme, Senior Citizens' Savings Scheme and monthly income plans (MIPs). A lesser known option is the systematic withdrawal plan (SWP) in mutual funds. Recently, some funds have even removed the exit load on SWPs if you were to withdraw up to 15-20% in the first year, to encourage people who want to start investing in this instrument. Here is a look at what an SWP is. WHAT IS SWP? Many of us would be familiar with a systematic investment plan (SIP ), where a corpus ...
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Invest in Tax Saving Mutual Funds Download Any Applications
Transact Mutual Funds Online Invest Online
Buy Gold Mutual Funds Invest Now