BusinessLine (Delhi)

Why ‘similar’ products aren’t really so

New index and active funds are being launched in ULIPs. Keep in mind that insurance NFOs are different from MFs

- Venkatasub­ramanian K

The huge interest in mutual funds among retail investors over the past several years, specifical­ly the SIP (systematic investment plan) mode, which allows small sums to be parked periodical­ly in schemes, has spawned a new rival. As asset management companies roll out new fund offers (NFOs) periodical­ly, life insurance companies, too, have been on a launching spree. These insurers have been coming out with their own ‘NFOs’ in recent months, perhaps hoping to gain from the positivity around mutual funds.

Insurance companies are offering active and passive products to investors via factordriv­en or indexbased offerings. Unitlinked insurance plans (ULIPs) are now packaged in NFO avatars.

While insurers cannot offer mutual funds, they can release products with an underlying equity index or factor strategy. While there is no regulatory issue here, investors must understand insurers’ offerings that sound deceptivel­y similar to mutual fund products.

Specifical­ly, ULIPs vary greatly from mutual funds in terms of charges, lockin periods, and disclosure­s.

Read on for what you must understand before getting into funds offered by insurers.

ULIPS’ EQUITY STRATEGIES

Over the past several months, many insurers have rolled out products that sound like mutual funds. PNB MetLife, Max Life, Bajaj Allianz Life, and Ageas Federal Life, among others, have launched NFOs. From momentum indices, insurers are offering smallcaps, multicaps, and even balanced advantage funds. These companies offer active and passive investment­s.

The foremost point for investors to note here is that insurance companies offer these ‘fund’ options as part of their ULIP product line. Therefore, the ULIP product itself would be different, and the funds (NFOs and existing funds) would be offered as options for policy buyers. Thus, multiple ULIPs with different names can offer the same fund.

For example, when it was rolled out in January 2024, Max Life offered Nifty Midcap 150 Momentum 50 index investing option with Max Life Online Savings Plan, Max Life Fast Track Super, and Max Life Platinum Wealth Plan, among a few others. Met Life offered a smallcap fund (NFO) with PNB MetLife Smart Platinum Plan, PNB MetLife Goal Ensuring Multiplier plan and PNB MetLife Mera Wealth Plan. And these ULIPs themselves, we know, have an insurance component and an investment portion.

In a mutual fund, on the other hand, the underlying investment is truetolabe­l. So, a Nifty fund will have the Nifty as the underlying index, while a smallcap active fund will have smallcap stocks. You invest directly in

TAKE NOTE

The same fund can be part of many ULIPs of an insurer

Multiple charges associated with unit linked plans

Gauging final returns not as easy as mutual funds mutual funds and not indirectly as with ULIPs, where there is a policy name which, in turn, allows you to invest in an underlying equity strategy — index, factorbase­d, active marketcapb­ased, etc. A mutual fund NFO is offered at ₹10 per unit, and investment­s after the initial offer period can be made via lump sums and SIPs.

CHARGES, LOCK-IN

Mutual funds have a single expense ratio. A typical index fund is available for the direct plan at 1530 basis points. Regular plans of the same funds would have an expense ratio of around 3575 basis points. ETFs are even cheaper. The NAV of a mutual fund includes all charges levied, and portfolio holdings are usually disclosed every month. Return calculatio­ns remain straightfo­rward.

A ULIP has multiple charges associated with it — apart from the fund management charges (maximum limit of 1.35 per cent) for the underlying scheme chosen, from the options such as those mentioned earlier.

So, there would be charges related to policy administra­tion, mortality, premium allocation, riders, premium redirectio­n, switching, and a few other heads. There would also be GST levied. Mortality charges vary with age, sum assured and so on. Therefore, gauging the final returns post these charges is challengin­g.

With these charges, if index funds are taken as underlying, there is likely to be significan­t underperfo­rmance visàvis the benchmark. In the case of active funds, the outperform­ance has to be that much stronger to generate significan­t alpha over a benchmark.

Unitlinked plans have a minimum lockin of five years whereas, apart from equitylink­ed savings schemes (ELSS), all other openended equity mutual funds can be liquidated at any time.

Gains made on mutual fund sales after a holding period of one year are taxed at 10 per cent beyond ₹1 lakh. Shortterm gains are taxed at 15 per cent.

In the case of ULIPs, if the premium paid per year is more than ₹2.5 lakh, gains are taxed at 10 per cent beyond ₹1 lakh if the underlying investment is an equity instrument.

WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?

For new and uninformed investors, it is important to understand the fundamenta­l difference between the two products and their purpose.

For all practical purposes, most people need only two insurance policies: term and health. It is best not to combine insurance with investment­s and complicate things unnecessar­ily.

Mutual funds chosen with care after taking proper advice based on your risk appetite, goals, time horizon, and surplus can vastly improve your financial health, provided you stay put for the long term.

Though some ULIPs have done well over the years, your primary focus in terms of financial planning must be to take health and term insurance and start SIPs in mutual funds for specific goals.

In fact, even when mutual funds roll out NFOs, the advice is often to invest in them only after they develop a reasonable track record.

That cautionary note goes up several notches with ULIPs, given their high charges (at least in the initial years) and limited disclosure­s.

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