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ValueProductPastPerformance

Company NameReco DateReco PriceExit PriceExit Date% ReturnIn days
ITC Ltd. 28/12/2023464.20487.5002/01/2025 5.02% 1 yrs
Britannia Industries Ltd. 27/07/20234,875.805,028.2512/11/2024 3.13% 1 yrs
JSW Steel Ltd. 22/02/2024826.951,003.0026/09/2024 21.29% 217 days
Bajaj Auto Ltd. 22/08/20249,910.0011,930.0017/09/2024 20.38% 26 days
Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd. 26/10/20235,429.306,536.0005/07/2024 20.38% 253 days
Shriram Finance Ltd. 25/04/20242,430.102,955.0028/06/2024 21.60% 64 days
Coal India Ltd. 25/01/2024389.50501.6022/05/2024 28.78% 118 days
Infosys Ltd. 27/10/20221,522.601,411.6019/04/2024 -7.29% 1 yrs
State Bank Of India 25/05/2023581.30782.0505/03/2024 34.53% 285 days
The Indian Hotels Company Ltd. 24/08/2023401.85517.9007/02/2024 28.88% 167 days

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Shashikant Singh
/ Categories: Mutual Fund

How DeMo changed the face of MF investment?

Indians by nature save a lot. Historically, we have seen that and going ahead there is no reason to believe otherwise. This is the area where we outscore many of the developed countries and even the global average. As of 2016, India’s gross domestic savings rate stood at 29 per cent, compared with the global average of 25 per cent.

 

Nevertheless, most of these savings were in physical assets such as real estate and gold. Of late it has been shifting towards financial assets. Net financial savings grew at a healthy pace of 9.9 per cent CAGR between fiscals 2013 and 2017, compared with savings in physical assets, which grew at a CAGR of 0.1 per cent. Commensurately, the proportion of net financial assets among the total household savings have seen a sharp rise from 31 per cent in fiscal 2012 to 42 per cent in fiscal 2017. As of fiscal 2017, the total household financial savings stood at Rs. 10.3 trillion.

 

Even in the financial savings, bank deposits cornered about two-third of the entire financial savings. On November 8, 2016, the Government of India announced phasing out of large-denomination currency notes (Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000 notes to be precise) representing the bulk of the total currency in circulation, as legal tender. The process was also known as demonetisation. Post demonetisation, however, there has been changing in the saving behaviour of individuals in India. In the last two years, we have witnessed a quantum spurt in investments into capital markets, with the household allocation to shares and debentures increasing from 2 per cent in fiscal 2015 to 10 per cent in fiscal 2017.

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DALAL STREET INVESTMENT JOURNAL - DEMOCRATIZING WEALTH CREATION

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