Financial literacy is more than being able to make
investment decisions
To manage your finances well you need
to understand your cash flow positions, responsibilities, goals, risk tolerance
and taxation profile.
Last week one AMC approached me to conduct an Investor awareness
session for some corporate employees. I love conducting such sessions so there
was no point saying no to them. But before every session, I wanted to make sure
the exact number of attendees and their work profile, so I requested the mutual
fund house to put me in touch with the HR person who will be arranging the
complete show.
I called up the HR Guy, and he told me that the participants
would be of Senior manager profile with high-income scale and specifically said
that almost all are “Financially Literate” persons, so the presentation should
be of quality and useful to them.
There was not much I could do on the presentation part as it was
a standard one and specifically oriented towards Investments Especially Mutual
funds, but I was excited to interact with the Participants, with the kind of
profile I was told by the HR person.
It was a small group of around 15 people. All of them were
looking quite mature around 45+ kind of age group.
Before I start the session, once again one of them told me that
they are “Financially Literate people” and have attended this kind of
presentation many times before. So, I should tell something which was not new
to them.
This time I told them that when they know themselves so well and
even their understanding level is so high, so rather than doing any session
lets answer their questions and doubts. All of them agreed.
As expected the set of questions that came out was, what are the
other options to save tax besides Section 80C savings? What mutual funds and
other Investment options can help them generate maximum returns? They were
looking for specific product advise.
Starting with tax savings first, I enquired where they were
investing currently to save taxes. To which the common reply came was through a
home loan.
Every member of the group was having a home loan, some of them
were having two loans. To them it was investment and tax saving both.
I Further asked how many of them feel that their Job is secure
and the Income will keep growing like it was in the past. None of them showed
their hands this time.
My next question to them was what plans do they have in their
mind and arrangements in their finances, to take care of home loan EMIs and
family expenses, in case something happens to their Job. What is the Liquidity
situation in their Investments profile? How much of emergency fund they have
saved? Do they have Independent health insurance cover?
All of them went quiet, but one person got up and said, after
all, expenses, and EMI's there was hardly left for them to save.
Sensing the anxiety in others’ silence, I started explaining
them what exactly I wanted to convey.
Friends, financial Literacy does not
mean to gain knowledge relating to investments only. Financial literacy is
the possession of the set of skills and knowledge that allows an individual to
make informed and effective decisions with all of their financial resources.
You have to understand the role of money in your life and impact
of each financial decisions on other important aspects of your personal
finance.
When you are not sure on your tomorrow’s income, how can you bet
on long term housing loans and ensure the regular commitment of EMI payments.
Tax saving is one thing but that does not call for getting into a long-term
liability.
Investments should not only be looked at from returns
perspective only. You need to have a proper understanding of the structure of
the product and investment asset class forming the base of that product.
You have to think on all kind of “What if” scenarios and need to
have answers to all of them.
When you search for high returns without understanding of your
requirements and not having hold onto your cash flows, then you are exposing
yourself to misselling or may be misbuying.
And I am sure these real estate investments are the result of
the same. When you had bought it at the first place, you must have been pitched
with high returns in this asset class, assured rental incomes, plus tax
benefits on home loan. All this in combination must have looked like a
mouth-watering deal to you.
And now in today’s scenario, when real estate is into a
slowdown, with reduction in the tax benefits by government and increasing in
family’s expenses with children going into higher classes, you have started
feeling the pinch and now finding solutions in “high returns” of equity.
Friends, you should think about long term only after ensuring
the short term and emergency requirements. There is difference in making
and continuing Investments. Growth in investments should be looked at along
with the liquidity and safety concerns, not just tax saving.
Even if equity markets are going well these days, there’s no
surety of it continue giving the same returns always. Long term equity returns
are better than other investment asset classes but only if you stay invested
for that long-time frame.
And all this requires understanding of your cash flow positions,
your responsibilities, your goals, your risk tolerance, your taxation profile
and not just your returns expectation.
Knowing all these things and the decisions you make for the
betterment of life and achievement of goals will decide the wellness in your
life. But when you limit your understanding to only investments than you are
not doing justice to the financial Literacy levels.
So at the end, I would like to say, stop searching for best
products and never invest in anything just from tax saving perspective, but
strive for a good life with better suited products and keep learning to be a
wise investor.
Happy InvestingSource:Moneycontrol.com
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