A PROJECT REPORT ON “COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF MUTUAL FUND ON THE BASIS OF ALPHA‚ BETA‚ AND STANDARD DEVIATION” FOR INDIA INFOLINE‚ PUNE BY NIKITA BHARAT CHINCHANE MBA Semester III Project Guide Prof. VAISHAMPAYAN In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Two-Year Full-Time PGPM Programme of the SMVIM (St. Mira Vishwakarma Institute Of Management) Pune AY: 2007-08 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I take this opportunity to express my deepest gratitude to all those people‚
Premium Mutual fund Investment Hedge fund
Unit VI DIVIDEND POLICY Dividend Policy • The return to the shareholders either by way of the dividend receipts or capital gains • It decides the Retention ratio & Pay out ratio • Earnings to be Distributed – High Vs. Low Payout • Objective – to Maximize Shareholders Return • Effects – Taxes‚ Investment & Financing Decision 2 A few models which studies this relationship & the dividend policies of firms are given below • • • • • Traditional Position Walter Model Gordon Model
Premium Dividend Stock market Dividend yield
mutual fund industry has definitely come a long way since it‘s inception in 1964. With the entry of private sector Mutual funds in 1993 the industry has witnessed serious competition. Therefore‚ it becomes essential to examine how the mutual funds have performed‚ and whether the trust imposed in them by the Indian investor is not out of place. In India‚ at present‚ there are many mutual funds operating both in public and private sector. These compete with each other for mobilizing of funds with
Premium Mutual fund Investment Financial services
OF INTEREST Any time your advisor makes her money other than by advising you‚ she has an ulterior motive. Any salesperson--any salesperson--giving you advice has an automatic built-in ulterior motive. That motive is her commission for selling you something. The only advisors without an ulterior motive are those who get paid for their time in advising you--regardless of the advice given. DOES YOUR ADVISOR HAVE A BIAS? I have run into bias on the part of advisors in many forms: 1. Male divorce
Premium Critical thinking Ethics English-language films
MUTUAL FUND SCHEMES AND INVESTORS ATTITUDE TOWARDS MUTUAL FUNDS (WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO HDFC AND SBI) MAJOR PROJECT TABLE OF CONTENTS PARTICULARS Page No. Acknowledgement Chapter-1 INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION 2-3 NEED OF THE STUDY OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY 4 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 5 LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY 6 Chapter-2 LITERATURE REVIEW NATIONAL 8-10 INTERNATIONAL 11-13 Chapter-3 ALL ABOUT MUTUAL FUNDS MEANING OF MUTUAL FUND 15 WORKING
Premium Mutual fund
SCOPE AND GROWTH OF MUTUAL FUNDS IN INDIA Erstwhile UTI was bifurcated into UTI Mutual Fund and the Specified Undertaking of the Unit Trust of India effective from February 2003. The Assets under management of the Specified Undertaking of the Unit Trust of India has therefore been excluded from the total assets of the industry as a whole from February 2003 onwards.Investement in Indian Matual Market The Indian mutual fund industry has significantly high ownership from the institutional investors
Premium Mutual fund
The Hedge Fund E-Book Version 5.2 By Richard Wilson [pic] 1 I truly believe that if you spend your time helping others get what they need and want the relationships you build will bring you what you need. In this spirit I’m offering the Hedge Fund Blog Book for free To date more than 125‚000 professionals have downloaded and read this book. 2 - Richard Wilson 3 4 5 6 Brought To You By:
Premium Hedge fund
Mutual Fund Performance in Bangladesh: An Analysis of Monthly Returns Md. Hashibul Hassan* Tahmina Akhter† Abstract Extensive research has evaluated mutual fund performance in different financial markets which led to mixed results (Soderlind et al.‚ 2000; Korkeamaki and Smythe‚ 2004); however‚ very limited work has been done to evaluate Bangladeshi mutual funds. This paper focused on measuring risk adjusted performance of 13 closed end mutual funds on the basis of monthly Net Asset Value. For
Premium Investment Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
A report on “A Study on Comparative Analysis of Mutual Funds in India” Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirement For MBA degree course By Vinoth K (Reg. No.: 0920034) Under the Guidance of Faculty Guide Company Guide Dr. Jeevananda S. Mr Darwin Edwin Coordinator Senior Manager Dept. of MBA‚ Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd. Christ University‚ Coimbatore Bangalore
Premium Mutual fund Hedge fund
Additional Funds Needed Method: Most companies expect growth in sales‚ which means its assets also must grow. Asset growth requires additional funds‚ so the firm may have to raise additional external capital if it has insufficient internal funds. If we assume that none of the firm’s ratios will change‚ we can use a simple approach‚ the Additional Funds Needed (AFN) method‚ to forecast financial requirements. • Required Increase in Assets In a steady-state situation in which no excess capacity
Premium Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Accounts receivable