The other way to make good money
By Outlook
Money
By Radhika Gupta
With
increasing income, investments other than equity, fixed income and gold are
gaining popularity, especially with high net worth individuals. The reason they
look at alternative and exotic investments is diversification and increasing
returns. While alternative investments also have the potential for substantial
capital appreciation, often in excess of traditional investments, they have a
larger probability of collapsing too, increasing the risk. However, some
alternatives, such as commodities can hedge your portfolio in a market crisis.
ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS
While
almost anything that has tangible value can qualify for an alternative
investment, a couple of ideas have become very popular among investors in the
last 10 years.
Private
equity funds are one of the most popular alternatives in India, with hundreds
of domestic and foreign funds available to the Indian investor. PE funds are
essentially a pooled vehicle for investing in unlisted emerging companies that
have substantial growth potential, as opposed to mutual funds that invested in
listed and more mature companies. PE funds take large stakes in their companies
and often play an operational role and bear higher risk than equity mutual
funds. Because of the additional risk, they should provide substantial
additional return, 25-30 per cent a year, where listed equities return 15-20
per cent. Among financial assets, hedge funds—alternative strategies that use
instruments such as commodities, currencies and equity derivatives to generate
returns uncorrelated to the market—are also now finding favour in India. Film
funds are also another unique asset class—pooled vehicles investing in selected
film projects—and a number have already been launched and gained investor traction.
Among
physical assets, wine is an asset that has been recognised as an asset class of
its own, with the London International Viners Exchange setting up a benchmark
for wine that tracks the top 100 wines. Wine, either bought as individual
bottles and stored in cellars, or in the form of wine funds managed by a
professional (available in the US and UK), has typically returned 10-15 per
cent annually over the years, comparable to the performance of global equities.
The return of course has varied greatly by fund and bottle vintage. A broader
asset class of collectibles, such as stamps and coins, has also found favour
with investors. Coin investing—picking up rare coins from around the world that
have unique aesthetic value and will appreciate—is popular as investors look at
coins in gold, silver, and other precious metals. Stamp collecting—collecting
postage stamps that will appreciate over a 15-plus year period, has a 100-plus
year history as a collectible asset class, with well-known strategies for stamp
investing. Art—whether collected in individual form as unique paintings or
sculptures, or in a pooled vehicle as a fund—has also caught on with investors,
although the launch of the first art fund in India (Osian's fund by Neville
Tuli) had left investors with a bitter taste.
THE RISKS OF ALTERNATIVES
Exotic
investing is high on risk. For one, most physical and financial alternative
asset classes are illiquid. It is virtually impossible to get your funds if (a)
you suddenly need the money, or (b) there is a market crisis and the investment
is not performing in the interim. Pooled vehicles have experienced this first
hand; Osian's art fund eventually shut down for this reason.
Holding
costs are also a challenge for physical assets. Wine, stamps, coins and art
when bought in an individual capacity (rather than a fund structure) do not
live in demat and fund form, and your inventories can quickly build up. Storage
costs are non-trivial, and storage quality is very important. The right storage
can make all the price difference for two wine bottles after a 15-year period.
Valuations
and the lack of transparency in them is also a difficult issue with exotics.
Unlike equities and commodities that have tradable prices, wine bottles,
sculptures and two year old tech companies don't list on the NSE and,
typically, bias gets in the way of their valuation. Moreover, there are no
known benchmark like the Nifty to measure performance.
Finally,
what influences the prices of these products is ultimately out of our hands.
The coin market, for instance, can be drastically affected by the government's
coinage policies—stopping putting silver in coinage or changing mintage
policies—which we may have
no idea
about!
REGULATION OR THE LACK OF IT
One of
the biggest challenges with alternatives is the lack of regulation around the
asset class. Financial investments such as private equity funds, for instance,
are regulated under the Sebi Venture Capital Regulations or the Portfolio
Manager Regulations, as are some hedge fund-like products, but reporting
standards are hazy at best.
The
proposed Sebi Alternative Investment Fund regulations is likely to correct many
of the problems and create clear structures for PE/VC/Hedge Fund investing.
The
situation for physical asset classes is even more complex. Like Osian's
now-defunct art fund, wine funds and stamp funds, too, are completely
unregulated. Besides the problem with both financial assets, such as PE funds,
and physical assets, such as wine, the underlying asset (not the fund) is also
not regulated. In these, you are really investing on faith!
SHOULD YOU INVEST?
With all
the risks and rewards known, should you invest in exotics? As usual, it depends
your investment sophistication. If you have not covered basic asset classes
such as equities, debt and commodities, it is too early to start thinking
alternatives. However, if you have got the basics in place, you should start,
with a couple of caveats in mind.
The most
important is start small. Only invest what is purely excess risk capital that
can be tied up at least for 5-plus years (don't expect multibaggers in two
years) and with which you can take serious risks. Finally, alternatives should
be no more than 5-10 per cent of your total portfolio.
INVESTMENT PLANS
As with
a traditional investment, it is important to have a strategy and do the right
due diligence.
Focus on
quality. Wine, art, stamps and unlisted companies are already so exotic that,
within this pool, one should focus on quality. Invest in a few quality assets,
particularly if you are buying in the physical form as a large numbers of
assets add to storage costs and pare returns. Stay clued into the investment
market. With physical assets, find the right storage options.
Buy from
reputed dealers, agents and distributors. With financial assets, ask the
private banker for all the due diligence and with a physical product, do a
check on ethics, past history and track record. Beware of large upfront fees,
and check the prices and commissions. If it seems too high or too low, there is
probably an issue. Portals for wines, stamps and collectibles can give you an
idea of prices.
When
choosing a fund, look at its track record, particularly during tough times.
Check how carefully
performance
is calculated and ask for audited numbers; see if the fund has returned money
back to investors on time. With private equity, check the exit track record of
the manager because mark-to-market return means little. Check on fund size, and
invest in funds that have the right size for an asset class. Assets of `1,000
crore may be too much for a venture fund, while `1 crore too little for a film
fund.
Alternatives
are definitely a worthwhile space to pursue, when done in the right quantity
and with the right approach.
No comments:
Post a Comment