Banking Sample Paper SBI PO (Main) Sample Test Paper-9

  • question_answer

    Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the question given below it. Certain words/phrases are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some of the question.
    Picking up your fund's latest fact sheet, you notice that the expense ratio is 2.1 per cent. Is that good or bad? Can the expense ratio significantly impact returns? Here's the answer. Expense ratio is the cost incurred to operate a fund. It is the amount you pay a fund - a portion of your invested money - every year to manage your money. Expenses include the costs of selling and buying stocks, fund management fee, agent commissions, registrar fees, and selling and promotional expenses. While different funds have different expense ratios, the SEBI has capped the amount that funds can charge based on the type of fund. Equity funds can charge a maximum of 2.5 per cent whereas a debt fund can charge 2.25 per cent of the average weekly net assets. Since this charge is made on the total assets of the scheme, your fund NAV is calculated after deducting this charge. But when do you really need to take note of the expense ratio? Well, it depends on the type of fund you invest in. Expense ratios for equity funds on an average vary between 2.2 and 2.5 per cent. Considering equity funds that have delivered more than 20 per cent in the last 10 years, a one percentage point change in expense ratio does not make a material difference. In actively managed equity funds, expense ratio is secondary. Funds follow different strategies and have different levels of portfolio churn, which, in turn, impact returns. Besides, equity has the potential to deliver blockbuster returns, which can more than compensate for higher expenses in management. Take, for instance, large-cap equity funds over the last five years. The top funds - such as HDFC Equity, ICICI Pru Focused Blue chip or Franklin India Prima Plus - all have among the lowest expense ratios of 2.2-2.3 per cent. But Birla Sun Life Top 100, whose expense ratio is 2.8 per cent, also ranks at the top. So your aim is to select a consistent, good-performing fund instead of worrying about where it ranks on the expense ratio front. If you're considering two funds with similar strategy and performance, use the expense ratio as a differentiator. Expense ratio makes a notable difference in debt fund returns as these funds do not generate the high returns equity funds do. For instance, after delivering close to 14-15 per cent returns annually, gilt funds took a knock last year. Returns on gilt funds are down to single digits in the last one year. With a long-term expected return of 8-9 per cent on such funds, expense ratios make a huge difference. A fund with a 1.2 per cent expense ratio will be much higher than one with 2.2 per cent ratio.
     

    Direction: Choose the word(s) which is/are most similar in meaning to the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
    Churn

    A)  freeze                          

    B)  performance 

    C)  mix up            

    D)  simmer     

    E)  movement

    Correct Answer: C


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