Even if you identify the stocks, how do you know if the price is right?
After all, it saw a sharp rise in the past six months. What if the price falls immediately after you buy?
You can invest through mutual funds but you dislike the idea of paying fund management charges.
Over a long period, this can add to a tidy sum.
One way of addressing these questions is to invest in direct equities in a systematic manner, similar to the Systematic Investment Plans in MFs.
Many brokerages offer plans whereby investors can invest systematically in specified stocks and exchange traded funds.
Investors can opt for a fixed amount or a fixed quantity to be invested on a regular basis, say, every month or every quarter.
If not, you can fix a certain amount and invest that on a regular basis, depending on your cash flow and asset allocation plan.
Let’s list the advantages of doing this:
Rupee cost-averaging
The principle behind systematic investment in equities is the same behind an SIP in MFs.
The biggest benefit is rupee cost-averaging, since you buy more stocks when the price is lower and fewer when the price is high.
“As the cost of your equity purchase is averaged over several transactions, the customer is protected from the stress of timing the market and speculation.
Investors should choose to invest a fixed amount, instead of a fixed quantity.
A fixed amount will buy more units when the market is tending lower and less when the markets are high,” said Vishal Gulechha, head, equity product group, ICICI Securities.
Risk diversification
The other big advantage is risk diversification, since you can invest in stocks across sectors.
There is always a high level of risk when you choose a single stock.
“Diversifying across sectors is very important. Ensure you choose blue chip stocks across seven to eight sectors and choose a basket of 10-15 stocks,” says U R Bhat, director of Dalton Capital.
Today, it is possible to buy as little as one stock, since you can buy online.
So, you can buy in small amounts and build your portfolio.
No hidden charges
Whether you buy through a brokerage's platform or on your own, it is a more transparent method as compared to buying an MF, says B Gopkumar, executive vice-president & head of broking, Kotak Securities.
It’s not like there are no charges while investing directly in equities at all. Every buy/sell transaction in shares involves costs, such as brokerage, securities transaction tax, service tax, demat charges and so on, points out Anil Rego, chief executive officer, Right Horizon.
The difference is that you know exactly what you are paying for.
In an MF, you pay agents’ commission, fund management charges and exit load if applicable.
Many a time, the investor is not aware of how much each charge is, since these are all clubbed under expense ratio.
Over a long time, this can eat into your profits.
Bhat says, “The 2-2.5 per cent fund management charge over a long period can be huge.”
In doing all this, there
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