nse-lix-15
NSE (National Stock Exchange of India) has introduced a new index of liquid stocks, namely LIX 15. LIX 15 Index is designed to provide exposure to the liquid stocks while making the index easily replicable and tradable.

In order to make the index easily replicable and tradable, criteria’s such as minimum turnover ratio and free float market capitalization are applied while selection of stocks. The index constitutes only 15 stocks with maximum weight of single stock capped at 15%.

Some of the liquid stocks like State Bank of India, Axis Bank and Yes Bank are included in this list. You can download the complete list here LIX15 stocks  Currently, these stocks represent nine industries, 22 per cent of turnover in cash segment and 34 per cent of single stock derivatives turnover in F&O segment on NSE.

Update:As per finance bill FY 15, the exemption limit of Rs. 10,000 on deposits will be per bank basis and not per branch basis.


Many people book theirs FDs just by considering a suitable combination of interest rate and the tenure, but little do they know that there are 2 more factors that determine the final return.

(1) Tax Deduction at Source or TDS

The first factor is TDS or Tax Deduction at Source- A bank branch shall deduct the TDS @ 10 % when accumulated interest exceeds Rs. 10,000.
This tax deduction not only reduces your interest amount but also deprives you of future return on it. This TDS erodes a significant amount especially when the tenure of the FD is a longer one.

Let us understand it with an illustration-

An FD (with quarterly compounding option) of Rs. 5,00,000 with a coupon rate of 10 % for a tenure of 5 years, matures to an amount of Rs. 8,19,308 but when TDS is deducted maturity amount reduces to Rs. 7,80,255. 
The difference in these two maturity values is Rs. 39,053 but the total tax deducted or TDS is Rs. 31,139 only.
This means Tax deduction deprives you a return of Rs. 7,914 Rs. (39,053-31,139).
To save the TDS one has to submit the form 15 G (15 H in case of senior citizens).
But this option is available to investors whose income don’t exceed basic income tax exemption limit.

So, what investors who are not eligible to submit these forms should do?

They can save the TDS by judicious money management using internet banking (and this is 100 % legal). I have discussed this in detail here.

(2) Compounding Option

If you don't need money then never ever choose the Interest Payment option but instead opt for Reinvestment of the Interest. Banks generally compound the interest quarterly.

Let's see an illustration-

Mr. Sharma opens an FD account with a tenure of 5 years for a principal of Rs. 5 lakh (.5 million) at a coupon rate of 10 % and opts for a Quarterly Interest Payment

Mr. Verma too goes for a similar FD but chooses Quarterly Interest Compounding option.

After 5 years, Mr. Sharma gets a total interest of Rs. 3,14,123 Rs. (including saving Interest on the FD interest) while Mr. Verma gets a total interest of  Rs. 3,19,308 (Rs. 5,185 more than Mr. Sharma).
Simply put, the interest earned by the FD fetches Mr. Sharma a meagre 4 % saving bank interest return while the same in case of Mr. Verma fetches 10 % FD return.
So, moral is, if you don't need the money then you should always choose the Interest Reinvestment option for your FD.

PS: Having read this article a person commented-

Sorry mate this is terrible advice. If income from FD falls above taxable limits the entire income is taxable. Even if you open multiple FDs to ensure no TDS you still need to pay up what you owe.

and answer to his concern is-

This article does not say how you can save the income tax but rather emphasizes on  how 'tax deduction' reduces your returns and by saving  this 'tax deduction' how you can optimize your returns.
Saving the TDS does not mean tax exemption.

Hope it helps.

Mr. Joshi was worried as his bank had recently switched its banking software to Flexcube from Finacle and during the transition phase staff at the local branch expressed their inability to issue an interest certificate for all of his fixed deposits.
Mr. Joshi was a wise investor and in order to avoid the deduction of TDS on FDs followed by the hassles of tax refund, he had made many small FDs in different branches of the bank using internet banking.
As the last date for filing the Income Tax return was nearing, he started to search for FD Interest Calculators on the net. 
But those calculators needed to be feed the period of deposit in days or months and calculating the same was not an easy task at all.
Mr. Joshi wanted a calculator seeking Start Sate and Maturity Date (instead of period of deposit) only.
















To cater the need of people like Mr. Joshi, I came with a simple excel calculator with different compounding options.This calculator can be downloaded here.

Don't want the hassles of downloading? Check for the Online calculator.

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