All You
Need To Know About Arbitrage Funds
Arbitrage,
in finance, equates to risk-free returns. The
concept sounds confusing, as any return requires investors to assume a
degree of risk, especially when they want returns above the level of bank
deposits.
Returns in financial markets are equivalent to profit in other
markets.
Just as a
trader buys at a lower cost in one market and sells
at a higher price in another market to earn
profit, investors in financial markets take advantage of
different prices existing in different markets to
make a profit. This difference is the return on the investment.
Arbitrage Funds –
Cashing in on price differentials
Arbitrage
Funds are Mutual
Funds that take
advantage of temporary price differentials of the same asset
in the cash market and the derivative market.
The cash
market is where shares are bought and sold at market or limit price for
delivery. You pay the actual price of the shares prevalent at the time of
purchase and the shares are delivered to your account.
The derivative market
is different. Here, you can transact at a future date by fixing
the price today. For example, you can agree to buy or sell one
kilogram of Gold or
a specific number of shares after a year at a
price decided today. If the actual price after a year
is more than what you decided today, you make a profit if you are buying
or a loss if you are selling. If the actual price after a year is
lesser, the situation reverses.
When you
combine these two transactions (cash market and derivative market), you create
a situation where your risk is mitigated. Let’s look
at an example.
Consider the
share price of an imaginary company, ImagineCo. Its share price today
is Rs. 1,000. The three months future price is Rs. 1,050. This means
you can buy or sell ImagineCo shares at the end of three months
at Rs. 1,050 if you wish so. So, by buying the ImagineCo three
months future, you have locked in the price. At the end of three months,
the actual share price in the market is, say, Rs. 1,060. This means you
have made a profit of Rs 10 per share.
From a
fund’s perspective, it can buy shares of ImagineCo at Rs. 1,000 and sell
the three months future at Rs. 1,050. Now after three months, two things
can happen. The prices can go down or can go up. Let’s take each scenario.
Scenario 1: The price goes up to Rs. 1,060 on the settlement
day after three months. On the settlement day, the future price and price in
the cash market converge. The fund can sell the stocks at Rs. 1,060 and
make Rs. 60 as profit. In order to settle the futures contract purchased,
the fund will need to buy futures. It will close the future position by buying
the future at the same price of Rs. 1,060, incurring a loss
of Rs. 10. The overall profit is Rs. 50.
Scenario 2: Suppose the share price goes down to Rs. 940. In
this case, the fund will incur a loss of Rs. 60 in the cash
market as it sells the share which it bought at Rs. 1,000. On
the future side, however, it will make a profit of Rs. 110 as the fund had
sold it for Rs. 1,050. Overall the profit will be Rs. 50, as
before.
Hence, irrespective
of the direction of price movement, the investor has made
money. In all our calculations, we have ignored transaction costs which
form a small proportion of your profit.
The advantage of Arbitrage Funds
Arbitrage
Funds are for conservative investors who cannot take the risk associated
with pure equity investing
through Mutual Funds. Arbitrage Funds are a low-risk investment with
average returns. They are very similar to Debt
Funds where the
risk is low.
However,
what works in favour of Arbitrage Funds over Debt Funds is the
tax advantage associated with it. Since Arbitrage Funds are
categorised as equity funds, the capital
gains tax is nil for long- term investments, i.e. for more than a year. In
case of Debt Funds, the taxes are both for short-term and long-term
capital gains.
Happy Investing
Source:Bankbazaar.com
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