The money contributed by active EPFO subscribers goes
into a common pool and is invested based on guidelines formulated by the
Central Government. The Central Board of Trustees of the EPFO selects
the fund managers and monitors their adherence to these rules.
According
to the recent disclosure to Parliament, the EPF’s ₹3.6 lakh crore
corpus (the provident fund alone and does not include the pension fund)
was invested to the extent of
₹1.74 lakh crore in Central and State
Government securities and Government-guaranteed securities; ₹52,845
crore in the special deposit scheme of the government; and
₹1,31,691
crore in corporate bonds (both public sector and private sector) as on
December 31 2014.
The government’s approved
investment pattern for the EPFO requires that up to 55 % of the
corpus be parked in government securities or State/Central
Government-guaranteed bonds. Five per cent within this limit may be
invested in gilt mutual funds.
Another 40 %
of its corpus is to be earmarked for term deposits in banks or corporate
bonds, of which 75% has to be rated investment grade.
The
remaining 5 % of the corpus may be parked in money market mutual
funds.
A recent amendment requires the EPFO to park a
minimum of 5 % and a maximum of 15 % in stocks or
equity-linked mutual funds. All these investments are managed on a buy
and hold basis, without any active trading on market movements.
How does the EPF select stocks?
The EPFO’s current equity investments are being made only through exchange-traded funds.
This
year, the scheme plans to invest 25 % of the allocated ₹5,000
crore in SBI Mutual Fund’s Sensex Exchange Traded Fund and 75 %
in SBI Mutual Fund’s Nifty Exchange Traded Fund.
SBI Mutual Fund will
charge 7 basis points (7 paise for every ₹100 managed) as fees for
managing the EPF money, of which 5 basis points will go to the fund and 2
basis points towards investor education initiatives.
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