Skip to main content

Should you Invest in NPS?

 
Should you invest in NPS?

NPS offers you to save for your golden years with tax benefits on your investments. However, the amount of pension is not guaranteed and depends on the accumulated corpus and rates available at the time of vesting.

 The National Pension Scheme (NPS) was introduced by the Government in 2004. It was launched under a separate regulatory body called the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). The objective is to provide a pension plan to the aging population of the country post-retirement. The country, to date, lacks a pension plan for its citizens in the private sector. Pension plans are only available to the employee in the Government sector and that too these are not driven by contributions but consist of fixed pay-outs, based on the last pay drawn.

The launch has been pretty much muted mainly due to the fact that there have been no incentives (in the form of tax breaks) to the individual and also there is no motivation to financial advisors (extremely low commission). A recent change in the Income Tax Act has finally made it attractive to an individual wherein an additional deduction of Rs 50,000 is provided against contributions to a pension plan under section 80CCD. This is over and above the limit of Rs 1.5 lakhs under section 80C.

Thus let us check what is NPS about and how it could be beneficial to you:
Features:

Types of investment

Tier I Account

Tier II Account

Who can Invest

All citizens of India between the age of 18 and 60 years

Liquidity

Non-withdraw able account

Voluntary savings facility

Minimum contribution (p.a.)

Rs. 6,000/- Rs. 2,000/-

Number of yearly installments

Minimum one

Withdrawal on Death

Entire corpus will be paid to the nominee

Withdrawal in other case

Post attaining 60 years – 60% can be withdrawn

Prior to 60 years – 20% can be withdrawn

Can be withdrawn anytime

Contribution per installment

Minimum Rs. 500/-

Minimum Rs. 250/-

Maximum contribution

No limit

Deduction

Additional Rs. 50,000 under section 80CCD

Not available

Taxation on Withdrawal

Taxable

Taxation on Annuity

 

 

How does the scheme work?

After attaining the age of 60 years, close to 60% of contributions can be withdrawn and the remaining 40% has to be used to purchase an annuity from an approved life insurer.

Annuity is a series of payments made at fixed intervals of time. Annuity plans necessitate the insurer to pay the insured an income at regular intervals until his/her death or till maturity of the plan. The most popular plan opted for by a majority is annuity till life with return of purchase price.

Let us understand this with an example:

Amount (in Rs.)

Invested amount (over a period of time) (A)

1,00,000.00

Assumed corpus at the age of 60 (B)

5,00,000.00

Withdrawable Amount (after 60 years of age)

Taxable as Income from other source (60% of B)

3,00,000.00

Amount used to purchase annuity (40% of B)

2,00,000.00

Annual Income after retirement**

Treated as salaried Income

(assumed at market rate of 8.5%)

17,000.00


** Annuity can be paid monthly, quarterly, half yearly or yearly as per the option chosen by the investor (on market rates).

 Tax Benefits:

The limit on deduction under section 80C is Rs 1.5 lakhs. This limit is for multiple options like Equity Linked Saving Schemes (ELSS), Life insurance, PPF, NPS, etc. It is advisable not to use this limit for NPS as using it under section 80CCD will render an additional tax deduction.

In Budget 2015, to provide a social safety net and the facility of pension to individuals, an additional deduction of Rs. 50,000 is provided for contribution to the NPS under Section 80CCD of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

Employers can also contribute upto 10% of basic salary to NPS. The amount paid by the employer to NPS would not directly form part of the taxable income of the individual.

Returns:

Below are returns of few NPS investments of 1 year and 3 years:

Categ-ories

SBI

LIC

UTI

ICICI

Reliance

Kotak

HDFC

Period

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

1 Yr

3 Yrs

Equity

23.7% 18.0% 22.2%

NA

24.0% 18.1% 24.0% 18.2% 23.7% 17.8% 23.7% 18.0% 23.8%

NA

G-Sec

19.4% 11.0% 19.5%

NA

18.8% 11.1% 19.1% 11.4% 18.8% 11.1% 17.9% 10.9% 18.5%

NA

Corpor-ates

14.7% 11.2% 14.5%

NA

14.0% 11.1% 15.7% 11.9% 14.6% 11.7% 14.4% 11.6% 14.6%

NA

 

Data as of 30th April 2015; returns are annualized.

As can be seen, the returns are pretty attractive for an individual to consider investment in NPS.

Advantages:

>> One of the cheapest pension products - Very nominal fund management charges compared to mutual funds and insurance plans.

>> Choice of fund managers - Private sector NPS subscribers have the choice of 6 fund managers and they are allowed to switch from one to another, giving them the option of choosing the best fund manager.

>> Tax advantages - Rs. 50,000 under section 80CCD, exclusively for NPS.

Disadvantages:

>> Restricted Liquidity - There are restrictions on premature withdrawal from Tier I accounts making the scheme very rigid. Only 20% can be withdrawn prior to reaching 60 years.

>> Restrictions on equity exposure - The exposure to equity investments is restricted to a maximum of 50%. People in the young age group who can take higher risks may see this as a disadvantage as they might be losing an opportunity.

>> Taxation on maturity – Taxation method for NPS is EET (Invested amount – Exempt; Interest Income – Exempt; Withdrawal and Annuity – Taxed), whereas taxation method for PPF and ELSS is EEE (Invested amount – Exempt; Interest Income or Dividend – Exempt; Withdrawal – Exempt). Thus it is not tax efficient to use the limit under section 80C to invest in NPS.

>> No guarantee on better returns - The NPS is not a defined benefit plan. It is a defined contribution plan. The returns are market linked and there is no guarantee of returns. This is not really a disadvantage, but actually an uncertainty. As the subscribers have the choice of investing 100% of the funds in Government securities wherein returns are more or less assured. Hence, the uncertainty is actually a matter of choice.

What should one do?

One should use 80CCD deduction to avail the benefit of NPS and the maximum amount per annum should be restricted to Rs. 50,000 and Section 80C can be used for other investment products.

An employer's contribution to NPS, on behalf of the employee, forms a part of salary of the employee and there is no limit for this contribution (as per tax perspective). Hence every employer could consider NPS as a part of salary structure.

Best Tax Saver Mutual Funds or ELSS Mutual Funds for 2015

1.ICICI Prudential Tax Plan

2.Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund

3.HDFC TaxSaver

4.DSP BlackRock Tax Saver Fund

5.Religare Tax Plan

6.Franklin India TaxShield

7.Canara Robeco Equity Tax Saver

8.IDFC Tax Advantage (ELSS) Fund

9.Axis Tax Saver Fund

10.BNP Paribas Long Term Equity Fund

You can invest Rs 1,50,000 and Save Tax under Section 80C by investing in Mutual Funds

Invest in Tax Saver Mutual Funds Online -

Invest Online

Download Application Forms

For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call

---------------------------------------------

Leave your comment with mail ID and we will answer them

OR

You can write to us at

PrajnaCapital [at] Gmail [dot] Com

OR

Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300

---------------------------------------------

Invest Mutual Funds Online

Invest Any Mutual Fund Online

Download Mutual Fund Application Forms from all AMCs

Popular posts from this blog

Mutual Fund Review: Religare Tax Plan

Tax Plan is one of the better performing schemes from Religare Asset Management. Existing investors can redeem their investment after three years. But given the scheme's performance, they can continue to stay invested   Given the mandated lock-in period of three years, tax saving schemes give the fund manager the leeway to invest in ideas that may take time to nurture. Religare Tax Plan's investment ideas revolve around 'High Growth', which the fund manager has aimed to achieve by digging out promising stories/businesses in the mid-cap segment. Within the space, consumer staples has been the centre of attention for the last couple of years and can be seen as one of the key reasons for the scheme's outperformance as compared to the broader market. It has, however, tweaked its focus and reduced exposure in midcaps as they were commanding a high premium. The strategy seems to have worked as it returned a 22% gain last year. Religare Tax Plan has outperformed BSE 100...

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...

UTI Equity Fund Invest Online

Invest In Tax Saving Mutual Funds Online Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Application Forms Buy Gold Mutual Funds Call 0 94 8300 8300 (India)   UTI Equity Fund   Invest Online UTI Equity is a large cap-oriented fund with assets under management worth Rs. 2,269 crore (as on June 30, 2013). The fund was originally launched in May 1992 as UTI Mastergain and is benchmarked against S&P BSE 100. A couple of years back the name of the fund was changed to UTI Equity Fund and many of the smaller funds of UTI were merged into this fund. Performance The fund has outperformed its benchmark as well as the equity diversified category average in the last one-, three- and five-year periods. It has repeated the same in 2013 (as on May 31). Since its inception the fund has delivered an impressive 26 per cent compounded annual growth rate which is superior to its benchmark performance in the same period. Y...

Good time to invest in Infrastructure Funds

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   Good time to invest in infrastructure The Sensex has gained almost 10 per cent from May 15 till date, while the CNX Infrastructure Index has gained almost 17 per cent in the period. The price to earnings ( P/ E) ratio of the BSE Sensex is 18.96; for the CNX Infrastructure Index, it is 24.57. The estimated P/ E for next year is 14.04 for the Sensex. Of the 24 companies that make up the CNX Infrastructure Index, six have a P/ E higher than 20. Does this mean infrastructure is fairly valued? Or, has it run up quite a bit? According to experts, barring stray companies, the infra sector is fairly valued and it is a good time to invest. Even if some companies are facing debt restructuring problems, once interest rates come down and regulatory norms become flexible, they will start giving good re...
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