The many advantages of ELSS funds
ELSS funds are an advantageous way to use the Rs 1.5 lakh
limit for tax saving investments under Section 80C
Under Indian tax laws, savers have a complete range of tax
saving instruments available to them. And yet, individuals often take
sub-optimal investment decisions with their tax-saving investments. Deposits
with long lock-ins that hardly pay anything more than inflation, insurance
schemes that eat away a lot of the gains in agent commissions, Equity linked
Savings Schemes (ELSS) of mutual funds chosen with scant regard to performance
track-records--all these (and more) are often seen when it comes to tax-saving
investments.
Get updates from Value Research in your inbox
Why does this happen? One common reason is that there is a
confusion of goals between saving tax and making investments. The typical
investor makes this decision either in late March under the duress of having
the deadline slip by, or under intense pressure by a salesman who drives home
the fact that time is running out. At the end of the day, we make suboptimal
investment decisions and when they ever realise it, they console themselves by
saying that that at least they got tax benefits for the investments.
This duality of concern--tax as well as
investments--prevents clear-headed thinking about just exactly what one is
getting out of an investment and whether the quantum of disadvantages are
actually worth the quantum of tax benefits that are being obtained. Investors
should work on eliminating both these sources of poor decision-making--time
pressure as well as not thinking through about these investments.
Eliminating time pressure is simple--just plan these
investments as early in the year as possible--if you haven't done it already,
then this is the right time to do so. And once you start in time, there's no
need to stop after a year. Since the best way to invest regularly in a fund is
through an SIP, you should start an SIP in a carefully-chosen ELSS fund and let
it run for a long duration.
These investments are pure investments and should not be
made if you do not have any plans to invest. For example, if you do not want to
invest in a fixed deposit but would rather invest in equity, then do so in your
tax-saving investments only. Any investment has to first make sense as an
investment, and only incidentally be a tax-saver.
Within this framework, ELSS funds are an advantageous way to
use the R1.5 lakh limit that is there for tax saving investments under Section
80C. But for many people, a good part of it gets consumed by statutory
deductions.
Unfortunately, all the statutory deductions are invested
into fixed income instruments Now, the Government has even placed some tax
deductible expenses under Section 80C.
Within this limit, ELSS is the better way to get the
advantages of equity investing.
No comments:
Post a Comment