Tag Maneger

Monday, August 24, 2020

what is ASBA ?

 ASBA is Application Support By Blocked Amount.

It is system of withholding an amount equal to the value of the security applied by the investor from his/her bank's Account when applying for the purchase of publicly issued securities. This means that the amount of investment is blocked in the investors bank account. The allotted amount is withdraw from his/her respective bank account and the remaining blocked amount is released.

ASBA system is a system that allows investor invest directly in publicly issued securities from there own accounts in bank and financial institution.

You can open an account with a bank that has obtained permission from the SEMON to provide ASBA services and apply for the purchase of securities of the desired amount. To view the bank and financial institution that provide ASBA Service in Nepal  

List Bank with ASBA Service 

s.n ASBA member Bank                    

1)  Agriculture Development Bank ltd.    

2)  Bank Of Kathmandu Ltd 

3)  Century Commercial Bank Ltd.

4)  Citizens Bank International Ltd.

5)  Civil Bank Ltd.                      

6)  Everest Bank Ltd                     

7)  Garima Bikash Bank Ltd.

8)  Global IME Bank Ltd.

9)  Himalayan Bank Ltd.

10) Jyoti Bikash Bank Ltd.

11) Kamana Sewa Bikash Bank Ltd.

12) Kanchan Development Bank Ltd.

13) Kumari Bank Ltd.

14) Laxmi Bank Ltd.

15) Lumbini Bikash Bank Ltd.

16) Machhapuchchhre Bank Ltd.

17) Mahalaxmi Bikash Bank Ltd.

18) Manjushree Finance Ltd.

19) Megha Bank Nepal Ltd.

20) Muktinath Bikash Bank Ltd.

21) Nabil Bank Ltd.

22) Nepal Investment Bank Ltd.

23) Nepal SBI Bank Ltd.

24) NIC Asia Bank Ltd.

25) NMB Bank Ltd.

26) Prabhu Bank Ltd.

27) Rastriya Banjiya Bank Ltd.

28) Sanima Bank Ltd.

29) Siddharth Bank Ltd.

30) Sunrise Bank Ltd. 


                     

Saturday, August 22, 2020

What is IPO & FPO ? Difference Between of IPO & FPO.

 These concepts are the first few fundamentals that budding stock investors should learn about before they begin stock market investments. Initial public offer (IPO) and follow-on public offer (FPO) are two basic fundamental ways a company raises money from the equity market. Companies can also raise money by way of corporate bond issuance. Explained ahead is the difference between IPO and FPO in detail, against different parameters.

What is an IPO?

Initial public offering or IPO is the first time a company goes public. When we say a company has gone public, it means it has offered its shares to the public at large and is ready to get listed at the stock exchanges of the country.

There are two exchanges such as:

1)BSE:Bombay Stock Exchange
2)NSE:National Stock Exchange

The first time a company gets listed at BSE, NSE, or both and offers its shares to be publicly traded the offering is called an IPO.

What does it mean for the company? 

It means that the company will get funding when you invest in it but it also comes with a great deal of responsibility of running the company in an efficient way so that its shareholders do not run into losses. It also means increased liquidity for the company.

What does it mean for investors?

Buying a share or a number of shares in a company means you are getting part ownership in the company. Once a company goes public, it also opens up options such as ESOP or Employee Stock Ownership Plans. A company may offer employees stock ownership which also has benefits like profit sharing.

What is an FPO?

FPO is a follow up to the IPO as the name suggests. A follow on public offer is the issuance of shares after the company is listed on a stock exchange. In other words, an FPO is an additional issue whereas an IPO is an initial or first issue.

What does it mean for the company?

An FPO is done to raise additional capital or to reduce existing debt and a company does it in two ways:

Dilutive FPO: In dilutive FPO, the company issues an additional number of shares in the market for the public to buy however the value of the company remains the same. This reduces the price of shares and automatically reduces the earnings per share also.

Non-dilutive FPO: Non-dilutive IPO takes place when the larger shareholders of the company like the board of directors or founders sell their privately held shares in the market. This technique does not increase the number of shares for the company, just the number of shares available for the public increases. Unlike dilutive FPO, since this method is not doing anything to the number of shares of the company, it does not do anything to the company’s EPS.

What does it mean for investors?

If we differentiate between IPO and FPO, FPO is a cheaper and safer option as compared to an FPO. When it comes to an FPO, you already have an idea about the company, the business, management strategy, financials and all other parameters.

Here are a few differences between IPO and FPO

Sr No.IPOFPO1.MeaningThe first issue of shares by a companyIssuance of shares by a company to raise additional capital after IPO2.PriceFixed or variable price rangePrice is market driven and dependent on number of shares increasing or decreasing3.Share capitalIncreases because the company issues fresh capital to the public for listing.Number of shares increases in dilutive FPO and remains the same in non-dilutive FPO4.ValueExpensiveCheaper in most cases because the value of the company is getting further diluted.5.RiskRiskier Comparatively less risky 6.Status of the companyAn unlisted company issues an IPOAn already listed company issues an FPO


It depends on your risk level and goals. Your risk levels need to be extremely high to invest in an IPO because you do not have much idea about the company. An FPO is relatively a safer bet for individual investors and new investors. Investing in an IPO requires more research than FPO. You need to understand the company fundamentals. If you are a long term investor, with a good risk appetite and have faith in the company, you can consider investing in an IPO. When it comes to the differences between FPO and IPO, risk and returns are very important components. However, risk and returns are correlated. IPOs have more potential to return more money if the company kicks off to a good start but there are more ‘ifs’ to it. To understand your profile as an investor and then take the decision.


Friday, August 21, 2020

WHAT IS SHARE MARKET? How To Enter Share Market for Biggeners

 Share market is where buying and selling of share happens. Share represents a unit of ownership of the company from where you bought it. For example, you bought 10 shares of Rs. 200 each of ABC company, then you become a shareholder of ABC.

1st Step

Open Bank Account

Required Document 

1. Citizenship

2. Password Size Photo

3. Water/Electricity Bill

2nd Step:DEMAT Account

-A DEMAT Account is an account that Allows investors to hold there shares in an electronic form.

-Stock in DEMAT account remain in

dematerialized form.

-Dematerialization is the process of converting physical shares into electronic format.

Bank Account

Work of Bank:

1) Amount Blocked when applying

2) Deduct amount after allotment

3) Refund Applied amount in case of not allotment

After allotment

DEMAT a/s

Credit in DEMAT a/s

3rd Step: Mero Share Service

- C-ASBA Service 

- It Is Electronic Service Through Which You

can apply shares in primary market anytime from anywhere.

- Optional Step

Note:yo service linako laghi bank gayara 

C-ASBA registration form Bharnuparne hunxa   


  Note: C-ASBA registration form bharishakepaxi  bank le CRN No. dine garxa jun chahi meroshare bata IPO/FPO/RIGHT fharda chahenxa 

CRN Full Name: C-ASBA registration number

yesto bank account kholnus jasle freema C-ASBA  service pardan garxa




   

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