My very first financial decision
after building my emergency fund came up in mid-2013. It was to invest in a
UITF (which I detailed in this post). That’s the moment when I first
dipped my twinkly newbie toes on the metaphorical waters of the financial
market (and yeah, I needed to sound fancy). I felt scared and excited at the
same time. But looking back now, I still see that this was the best option for
me at that time. Today, I’ll be introducing UITFs and why it should be a part
of your portfolio too going forward.
What are UITFs
UITF, or Unit Investment Trust
Fund, is an investment vehicle offered by banks where your money is pooled
with the money from other investors into a single fund. This pool of cash is
handled by the “fund manager”, and he will be in charge on what happens to your
money. Sounds scary that one guy controls all this money, right? Well,
technically, if you put some cash in your saving’s account anyway, you are also
allowing the bank to use that money outright for their financial ventures. I’m
saying that you’re risking your money into the same banana banking
institution, so why not leverage this risk?
Most banks offer different types
of UITFs depending on the risk appetite of the investor. They have portfolios
containing equities (stocks), fixed income securities (treasury bills and high
yield savings accounts), bonds (both government and corporate), or a
combination of each. You can check my blog post regarding the different type of
UITFs here.
Where are they
UITFs are commodities of banking
institutions. Therefore, you should always see them in your banks. That’s not
the case most of the time! There are few ads displaying UITFs, which is one of
the reasons why the average Juan doesn’t care (or have any idea) about it.
Advertisements showing car and housing loans and credit cards dominate the media,
and for a good reason. Well, not for us but for the banks (i.e. capitalism).
So anyway, you can approach the
banking officer (or manager) in your bank and ask about their UITF products.
Hopefully, they can explain to you some detailed information regarding their
products.
Why invest in UITFs
The gist is that UITFs offer an
easy-to-access and cheap option to diversify your investments with less hassle.
Not yet convinced? I wrote a separate entry discussing the pros (and cons)of investing in UITFs.
How it works
In UITFs (and mutual funds), the
price of each “share” is called the Net Asset Value per Unit (or NAVPU). This
NAVPU is similar to the stock price of a company because both values determine
the current price tag of the investment. Every time you put money into your
UITFs, the bank automatically calculates how many participating units (financially correct term) you have purchased at
that time. When the time comes and you want to withdraw your money, the bank
would just multiply the total participating units that you have with the
current NAVPU for the day.
For example, if you invested your
₱50,000.00 in the BDO Equity Fund way back in June 2012 when the NAVPU
was 319.6591, the fund value of that now should be ₱70,682.52. Of course, this
is the gross value and tax is not yet accounted here. That’s an annualized ROI
of 7.17%. Super nice!
UITFs are a good place for an
average Juan to start his financial journey. Yes, you can find better
investments with a higher ROI. But considering that you did it in a
semi-passive manner I think it’s a good deal overall. After that, he/she can
expand to other investment instruments available elsewhere. And believe me,
there’s a ton out there!
Ciao!