Caveat emptor applies everywhere but more so when it comes to investing. It’s all too common — stock brokers encouraging churn to the detriment of clients, investment bankers relentlessly dressing up bad apples in pursuit of high fees, insurance agents mis-selling policies regardless of customer needs and requirements and so on. Mis-selling of financial instruments is largely a moral issue and regulations hardly resolve them effectively.
That’s why the move by Kotak Mahindra Asset Management Company asking employees to invest in its own fund schemes is laudable. This ensures the interests of investors are aligned with that of the asset managers. Late stock broker turned mutual fund manager Parag Parikh was the first to put this – the concept of eating one’s own cooking — into practice in India. Not only did he and his employees invest in their fund, he also embraced the idea of having just one single equity fund, unlike other mutual funds that have a whole range of funds to cater to so-called differing risk profiles.