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What is Share Buyback? Meaning, Benefits & Risks

Imagine you started a small business with four friends. Each of you owns 20% of the company. Now, one of your friends wants to exit, and instead of letting an outsider buy his share, the business itself buys back that 20% stake. Now the remaining four people each own a larger piece of the same pie.

That, in simple terms, is what a share buyback is.

A share buyback (also called a stock repurchase) is when a publicly listed company uses its own money to purchase its own shares from the open market or directly from shareholders at a fixed price. Once the company buys these shares back, they are either cancelled or held in the company’s treasury. Either way, the total number of shares floating in the market goes down.

This might sound counterintuitive at first — why would a company spend money to buy its own stock? But there are actually many smart reasons behind this move, and we’ll go through all of them in detail.

Stock Buyback

Why Do Companies Announce Stock Buybacks?

When a big company like Infosys, TCS, or Wipro announces a share buyback, it makes front-page news. But why do companies do this in the first place?

Here are the most common and genuine reasons:

The Company Thinks Its Shares Are Undervalued

This is probably the most common reason. Sometimes, despite the company performing well in terms of profits, sales, and growth, the stock price doesn’t reflect that strength. The market may be pessimistic or distracted.

In such cases, the management may say, “We know our company better than the market does, and we believe our shares are worth more than what they’re trading at. So let’s buy them back.”

By buying its own undervalued shares, the company is essentially making an investment in itself — one it believes will pay off over time.

Surplus Cash With No Better Use

Profitable companies sometimes accumulate large amounts of cash on their balance sheets. If there aren’t good investment opportunities available — no new factories to build, no companies to acquire, no big R&D projects — the cash just sits idle.

Rather than letting that cash lose value to inflation, companies return it to shareholders through buybacks. It’s a smart and tax-efficient way to use excess cash.

For Improving Earnings Per Share (EPS)

EPS is calculated by dividing the company’s total profit by the number of outstanding shares. If the profit stays the same but the number of shares reduces due to a buyback, the EPS automatically goes up.

A higher EPS makes the stock look more attractive to investors, which can push the stock price higher. This benefits everyone who continues to hold shares in the company.

Example:

  • Company profit: ₹100 crore
  • Shares before buyback: 10 crore → EPS = ₹10
  • Shares after buyback: 8 crore → EPS = ₹12.50

With the same profit, EPS improved by 25% just because of fewer shares.

To Reward Long-Term Shareholders

A buyback is one way companies reward their loyal shareholders. If you hold shares in a company that buys back stock, your ownership percentage in the company goes up automatically (even if you don’t buy any new shares). Over time, this can significantly increase the value of your investment.

To Counter ESOP Dilution

Many companies offer Employee Stock Option Plans (ESOPs), where employees receive shares as part of their compensation. Over time, this keeps adding new shares to the market, which dilutes the ownership of existing shareholders.

A buyback helps absorb this dilution. The company uses the buyback to cancel newly issued ESOP shares, keeping the total share count stable.

To Signal Confidence in the Future

When a company announces a buyback, it’s essentially saying, “We are confident enough in our future to invest in ourselves.” This signal is very powerful for investor psychology. It builds trust and often leads to a rise in the stock price, even before a single share is bought back.

Tax Efficiency

In some situations, a buyback can be more tax-efficient than paying dividends. While dividends are taxed as income in the hands of shareholders, capital gains from buyback participation may be taxed differently depending on the holding period. This makes buybacks an attractive option for companies looking to return money in a tax-smart way.

How Does the Stock Buyback Process Work? 

Let’s walk through the entire process in simple steps so you know exactly what happens from start to finish.

Step 1: Board of Directors Approves the Buyback

Everything starts with the company’s board of directors. They meet, evaluate the company’s financial position, and decide whether a buyback makes sense. They fix the buyback price, the number of shares to be repurchased, and the method to be used (open market or tender offer).

For smaller buybacks (up to 10% of the paid-up capital), a board resolution is sufficient. For larger ones (above 10% and up to 25%), a special resolution passed by shareholders is required.

Step 2: Public Announcement

Once approved, the company makes a formal public announcement. This announcement includes:

  • The buyback price (usually at a premium to the current market price)
  • The number of shares the company wishes to buy back
  • The opening and closing dates of the offer
  • Eligibility criteria for shareholders
  • The method of buyback (open market or tender offer)

This announcement is published on stock exchanges (NSE/BSE) and in newspapers, making it available to all shareholders.

Step 3: Record Date Is Set

The company sets a record date. Only those shareholders who hold shares in the company as of this date are eligible to participate in the buyback. If you buy shares after the record date, you won’t be eligible.

Step 4: Shareholders Decide Whether to Participate

Here’s the important part — participation is completely voluntary. You can choose to:

  • Tender your shares and receive the buyback price (which is usually higher than the current market price).
  • Hold your shares and stay invested. Since fewer shares will be outstanding after the buyback, your ownership percentage will go up.

Neither choice is wrong. It depends on your financial goals and your view of the company’s future.

Step 5: Shares Are Tendered Through the Depository

If you decide to participate, you submit your shares through your broker before the deadline. The shares are blocked in your demat account and sent to the company’s depository account.

Step 6: Company Accepts and Pays

The company reviews all the shares tendered. If oversubscribed (more shares offered than required), it accepts shares on a pro-rata basis — meaning you may not get all your shares accepted. The company then transfers the buyback price directly to your bank account.

Step 7: Shares Are Cancelled or Held in Treasury

The repurchased shares are typically cancelled, which permanently reduces the total share count. In some cases, they may be held as treasury shares and reissued later.

Step 8: Buyback Completion Report

Finally, the company publishes a completion report on the stock exchange, disclosing how many shares were bought back, the total amount spent, and the revised share count. This brings full transparency to the entire process.

Types of Share Buyback Methods

Not all buybacks work the same way. In India, there are two main methods companies use:

Tender Offer (Fixed Price)

In this method, the company announces a specific price at which it will buy shares and a specific window of time (usually 2–3 weeks). Shareholders who want to participate must tender their shares during this window.

The buyback price in a tender offer is almost always above the current market price — sometimes by 10% to 30% — making it attractive for shareholders. This is the most common method used in India.

Example: If a stock is trading at ₹500, the company may offer to buy it back at ₹600. You can choose to tender and earn ₹100 extra per share.

Open Market Buyback

In this method, the company buys shares directly from the stock exchange over a longer period, just like a regular investor would. There’s no fixed price — the company buys at prevailing market prices.

This method is more flexible for the company but offers less certainty to shareholders compared to the tender offer route. It’s more commonly used in the US; in India, tender offers are more prevalent.

How Is the Buyback Price Determined?

One of the most important questions shareholders ask is: “How does the company decide what price to offer?”

There isn’t one fixed formula, but companies consider several methods:

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)

The company calculates the present value of all expected future cash flows. If this value is significantly higher than the current stock price, it signals undervaluation and supports a buyback at a premium.

Book Value Method

The company divides its total net assets (assets minus liabilities) by the number of outstanding shares. This gives the book value per share. The buyback price is often set at or above this value.

Market Price Method

The company looks at recent market prices — not just the current price, but trading history over the past few weeks. A buyback price is then set with a premium over this average.

Comparable Company Analysis

The company compares its valuation multiples (like Price-to-Earnings or Price-to-Book ratio) with similar companies in the industry. If its own shares look cheap relative to peers, it justifies a buyback.

In most cases, the final buyback price takes all these factors into account along with the company’s available cash and strategic intent.

SEBI Regulations for Share Buybacks in India

In India, share buybacks are strictly governed by SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) under the SEBI (Buy-Back of Securities) Regulations, 2018, and the Companies Act, 2013. These rules protect both companies and shareholders from misuse.

Here are the key rules every investor should know:

  • Maximum limit: A company cannot buy back more than 25% of its total paid-up equity capital and free reserves in a single financial year.
  • Debt-to-equity ratio: After the buyback, the company’s debt-to-equity ratio should not exceed 2:1. This ensures the company doesn’t overspend and remains financially healthy.
  • Fully paid-up shares only: Only fully paid-up shares are eligible for buyback. Partly paid shares don’t qualify.
  • Cooling-off period: A company cannot announce another buyback within one year of completing the previous one.
  • No fresh share issuance: The company cannot issue new shares of the same class for at least 6 months after a buyback. This prevents the company from buying shares with one hand and selling new ones with the other.
  • Escrow account: The company must deposit at least 25% of the total buyback amount in an escrow account before the process begins. This ensures the money is actually available.
  • Mandatory cancellation: Bought-back shares must be cancelled within 7 days of completion and cannot be reissued.
  • Full disclosure: Every detail of the buyback — price, quantity, timeline, eligibility — must be disclosed publicly to ensure complete transparency.

These regulations ensure that buybacks are done in a fair, transparent, and financially responsible manner.

What Are the Benefits of a Share Buyback?

For the Company

  • Uses idle cash productively
  • Improves key financial ratios like EPS and Return on Equity (ROE)
  • Signals strength and management confidence to the market
  • Offsets dilution from ESOPs
  • Optimizes the company’s capital structure

For Shareholders Who Participate

  • Receive a price that is usually higher than the current market price
  • Get liquidity — especially useful if the stock has low trading volume on the exchange

For Shareholders Who Don’t Participate

  • Their ownership percentage in the company increases automatically
  • EPS goes up, which can push the stock price higher over time
  • Long-term value creation as the company’s per-share metrics improve

Impact of Buyback on Stock Price

When a company announces a buyback, the stock price usually reacts positively. Here’s why:

Immediate Reaction: The announcement itself boosts investor sentiment. It signals that management believes the stock is undervalued. Retail investors often rush to buy, pushing the price up toward the buyback price.

Supply-Demand Effect: With fewer shares in circulation after the buyback, the same demand from investors is now chasing fewer shares. Basic economics tells us that reduced supply with steady demand leads to higher prices.

Better EPS: As fewer shares remain, EPS improves. Better EPS usually attracts more investors, further supporting the stock price.

Improved ROE: With fewer shares and the same level of profits, Return on Equity also improves. This makes the stock more attractive in analyst reports and institutional portfolios.

However, a buyback doesn’t guarantee a stock price rise. If a company is doing a buyback to disguise poor business performance or to artificially boost management’s stock-linked bonuses (ESOPs), it could be a red flag. Investors should always look at the underlying business health before reading too much into a buyback announcement.

Share Buyback vs Dividend 

Both buybacks and dividends are ways companies return money to shareholders, but they work very differently. Let’s break it down:

Factor Share Buyback Dividend
What is it? Company buys back its own shares Company pays cash to shareholders
Who gets the money? Only those who tender their shares All eligible shareholders
Is it voluntary? Yes — you choose to participate or not No — you automatically receive it
Impact on share count Reduces outstanding shares No change in share count
Impact on EPS Increases EPS No direct impact on EPS
Flexibility for investors You decide when to sell Money comes to you regardless
Tax treatment May attract capital gains tax Taxed as income at your slab rate
Market signal Management believes stock is undervalued Company has stable profits to distribute
Best suited for Growth-oriented investors who prefer capital appreciation Income-seeking investors who need regular cash

Which is better? There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. It depends on the company’s situation and your personal goals.

If you need regular income from your investments, dividends are great. But if you are a long-term investor looking for capital appreciation and tax efficiency, buybacks can be more beneficial. Many companies — especially in the Indian IT sector — use a combination of both to keep different types of investors happy.

Real-World Example 

Let’s say ABC Technologies Ltd. has the following financials:

  • Total outstanding shares: 10 crore
  • Annual profit: ₹200 crore
  • Current EPS: ₹20 per share
  • Current stock price: ₹350

The company feels its stock is undervalued (it’s trading at just 17.5x earnings, while peers are at 22x). It has ₹400 crore in cash on its balance sheet.

The board approves a buyback of 1 crore shares at ₹450 per share (a 28% premium to the market price).

After the buyback:

  • Outstanding shares: 9 crore (down from 10 crore)
  • Total money spent: ₹450 crore
  • Annual profit (unchanged): ₹200 crore
  • New EPS: ₹200 crore ÷ 9 crore = ₹22.22

The EPS has improved by over 11%, even though the company didn’t earn a single extra rupee more. Investors who stayed invested now own a slightly larger stake in the company, and with higher EPS, the stock is likely to attract more buyers.

Conclusion

A share buyback is one of the most powerful tools a company has to create value for its shareholders. When done for the right reasons — undervalued stock, excess cash, or desire to improve per-share metrics — it’s a signal of a healthy, confident management team.

As an investor, understanding buybacks helps you make smarter decisions. Should you tender? Should you hold? Is the buyback a genuine sign of strength or a financial manoeuvre to boost short-term numbers? The answer lies in understanding the company’s fundamentals, the premium being offered, and your own investment goals.

The Indian stock market has seen numerous high-profile buybacks from companies like TCS, Infosys, HCL Technologies, and Wipro over the years. Each time, well-informed investors who understood the mechanics were better positioned to make the right call.

So the next time your company announces a buyback, don’t just react — understand it, analyse it, and then decide what’s best for your portfolio.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. Is a share buyback good or bad for investors?

Generally, it’s considered positive. It increases EPS, signals management confidence, and rewards shareholders. But whether it’s good for you depends on the premium offered and your investment goals.

  1. Do stocks always go up after a buyback announcement?

Often yes, but not always. Stocks usually rise when the buyback signals undervaluation and management confidence. But if the buyback is seen as covering up poor performance, the reaction can be muted or even negative.

  1. Can I refuse to participate in a buyback?

Yes, absolutely. Participation is 100% voluntary. You can choose to hold your shares and benefit from higher EPS and ownership percentage after the buyback.

  1. What happens to shares after they’re bought back?

In India, bought-back shares are typically cancelled permanently within 7 days of the buyback completion. This reduces the total share count and improves per-share metrics.

  1. Is the buyback price always higher than the market price?

In a tender offer (the most common method in India), yes — the buyback price is set at a premium. In an open market buyback, the company buys at prevailing market prices.

  1. How do I participate in a buyback through my demat account?

Log in to your broker’s platform (like Rupeezy), go to the buyback section, enter the number of shares you wish to tender, and submit before the deadline. Your shares will be blocked in your demat account until the process is complete.

  1. Can a company do unlimited buybacks?

No. SEBI restricts buybacks to a maximum of 25% of paid-up equity capital in a financial year. There’s also a mandatory one-year cooling-off period between two consecutive buybacks.

  1. What is the tax on buyback proceeds?

In India, buyback proceeds are subject to capital gains tax. Short-term capital gains (if shares held less than 12 months) are taxed at 20%, while long-term capital gains (held more than 12 months) above ₹1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5% (as per current tax laws — always verify with a tax advisor).

FCNR NRE NRO Account Guide for NRI

Let’s be honest — when you first moved abroad and someone back home mentioned “NRI accounts,” your eyes probably glazed over. Three confusing acronyms, a dozen rules, and a handful of bank brochures that somehow managed to explain nothing clearly. Sound familiar?

Well, you’re not alone. Thousands of Non-Resident Indians wrestle with this exact question every year: between FCNR NRE NRO accounts, which one’s actually the right fit for their money? Whether you’re sending remittances home, parking your foreign salary somewhere safe, or just trying to keep your savings from getting eaten up by taxes and currency swings — the answer genuinely matters.

Here’s the thing, though. It’s not as complicated as the banking jargon makes it sound. Once you strip away the finance-speak and look at what each account actually does, the choice becomes surprisingly straightforward. This guide does exactly that. We’ll walk through each account type — what it is, who it’s for, what it costs, and where it shines — so you can walk away with a real answer, not just more confusion.

FCNR NRE NRO

What Are NRI Bank Accounts?

Before diving into the FCNR NRE NRO comparison, it helps to understand why these accounts exist in the first place. When an Indian citizen becomes a Non-Resident Indian — either by taking up employment abroad, getting a foreign visa, or simply living outside India for more than 182 days in a financial year — their residential status changes under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

That change in status means they can no longer simply use a regular Indian savings account. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has laid out specific account types to help NRIs manage money both in India and abroad. Each type serves a different purpose, and mixing them up can lead to tax complications, repatriation issues, or just plain missed opportunities.

So the three key players are:

  • NRE Account — Non-Resident External Account
  • NRO Account — Non-Resident Ordinary Account
  • FCNR(B) Account — Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Banks) Account

They’re all legitimate, RBI-approved, and widely offered by Indian banks. But they work very differently — and that’s where most people get tripped up.

What Is an NRE Account?

An NRE account is essentially your go-to if you want to park your foreign earnings in India. You deposit money in a foreign currency (say, US dollars or British pounds), the bank converts it to Indian rupees, and you hold it in an INR-denominated account.

The big draw? Everything in an NRE account is completely tax-free in India. Interest earned, principal, the whole lot — you don’t owe a single rupee in Indian income tax on it. That’s a pretty sweet deal, honestly.

On top of that, both the principal and interest are fully repatriable. In plain English, that means you can move your money back out of India to your country of residence without any fuss or RBI permission needed.

Who Should Open an NRE Account?

If you’re earning abroad and want to save in India while keeping the option to bring that money back whenever you need it — an NRE account is your best bet. It’s particularly popular among:

  • Software engineers working in the US or UK
  • NRIs sending regular remittances to family in India
  • People planning to return to India eventually but not immediately
  • Anyone who wants to invest in Indian mutual funds or stocks using foreign income

The Catch With NRE Accounts

The conversion from foreign currency to rupees happens at the time of deposit. That means you’re exposed to currency exchange risk. If the rupee weakens significantly, great — your money is worth more. But if it strengthens, you could lose a bit on the conversion. It cuts both ways.

What Is an NRO Account?

Here’s where it gets a little different. An NRO account is designed for income that originates in India. Think rental income from a property in Bengaluru, dividends from Indian shares, a pension from a government job, or proceeds from selling a piece of land back home.

Unlike the NRE account, funds in an NRO account are held in Indian rupees and are subject to Indian income tax. Interest earned on an NRO account is taxable at 30% (plus applicable surcharge and cess), which is admittedly steep. Banks also deduct TDS — Tax Deducted at Source — on the interest before you even see it.

Repatriation Rules for NRO Accounts

This is where NRO accounts get a bit tricky. Repatriation — that is, moving money from your NRO account back to a foreign bank account — is allowed, but with limits. As of current RBI guidelines, you can repatriate up to USD 1 million per financial year from an NRO account, provided you’ve paid all applicable taxes and submit a CA certificate (Form 15CA/15CB).

So it’s not impossible, but it does require more paperwork compared to an NRE account.

Who Should Open an NRO Account?

If you have any income coming in from India — rental income, interest, dividends, business income — you essentially need an NRO account. It’s not really optional for most NRIs with financial ties back home. In fact, many NRIs end up converting their existing Indian savings accounts into NRO accounts once their residential status changes, which is exactly what FEMA requires.

What Is an FCNR(B) Account?

FCNR stands for Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Banks). Unlike the NRE and NRO accounts, an FCNR(B) account holds your money in foreign currency itself — no conversion to rupees. You can open FCNR(B) accounts in several permitted currencies, including:

  • US Dollar (USD)
  • British Pound (GBP)
  • Euro (EUR)
  • Japanese Yen (JPY)
  • Canadian Dollar (CAD)
  • Australian Dollar (AUD)

It’s a fixed deposit — not a savings account — so you deposit money for a fixed tenure ranging from 1 year to 5 years and earn interest in the same foreign currency. When it matures, you get your principal and interest back in the same currency you deposited.

Why Is the FCNR(B) Account So Underrated?

Because it completely eliminates currency risk. That’s huge. A lot of NRIs are hesitant to bring money to India precisely because they’re worried about what happens to the rupee. With an FCNR(B) account, that concern just… disappears. Your money stays in dollars, pounds, or euros the whole time.

Interest earned on FCNR(B) accounts is also fully exempt from Indian income tax, just like an NRE account. And the funds are fully repatriable — again, just like NRE. So in many ways, FCNR(B) is the NRE account’s more stable, currency-protected sibling.

The Limitations of FCNR(B)

It’s a term deposit, not a regular savings account. You can’t dip into it freely like you might with an NRE savings account. Also, interest rates on FCNR(B) accounts depend on international benchmarks (like LIBOR or SOFR), and they’ve historically been lower than NRE fixed deposit rates. That said, when the rupee is volatile, the currency protection can more than make up for the lower interest rate.

FCNR NRE NRO Comparison

Here’s the clear, no-nonsense comparison table:

Feature NRE Account NRO Account FCNR(B) Account
Currency Indian Rupees (INR) Indian Rupees (INR) Foreign Currency
Account Type Savings/FD/Current Savings/FD/Current Fixed Deposit only
Source of Funds Foreign income only Indian income Foreign income only
Taxability in India Tax-free Taxable (30% TDS on interest) Tax-free
Repatriation Fully repatriable Up to USD 1 million/year Fully repatriable
Currency Risk Yes (converts to INR) Yes (already INR) No (stays in foreign currency)
Joint Account With another NRI With NRI or resident Indian With another NRI
Tenure (FD) 7 days to 10 years 7 days to 10 years 1 year to 5 years

That one table right there probably answers half your questions, doesn’t it?

FCNR NRE NRO and Tax

NRE Tax Benefits

The NRE account’s tax exemption is one of its strongest selling points. Interest earned — whether on savings or fixed deposits — is entirely outside the scope of Indian income tax. This makes it especially attractive for NRIs in high-tax countries who are already paying taxes abroad and don’t want to deal with double taxation in India.

That said, it’s worth checking your country of residence’s tax laws. Some countries, like the US, tax global income — so even though India won’t tax your NRE interest, the IRS might.

NRO Tax Reality

The 30% TDS on NRO interest stings a little, there’s no sugarcoating it. However, India has Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) with many countries. If your country has a DTAA with India, you might be able to claim credit for the taxes paid in India or benefit from a reduced TDS rate. This requires submitting your Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) to your bank, but the effort can be well worth it.

FCNR(B) Tax Treatment

Same as NRE — completely exempt from Indian income tax. Since the account is in foreign currency, there’s also no capital gains angle when you repatriate. Clean, simple, and tax-efficient.

Common Mistakes NRIs Make With FCNR NRE NRO Accounts

Let’s talk about the slip-ups people regularly make. Awareness is half the battle!

  1. Continuing to use a regular Indian savings account after becoming an NRI. This is actually a FEMA violation. Once you become an NRI, you’re required to convert your existing savings account to an NRO account or close it.
  2. Assuming NRO and NRE are interchangeable. They’re not — depositing foreign income into an NRO account is technically allowed, but you lose the tax exemption and full repatriation benefits you’d get with an NRE account.
  3. Ignoring FCNR(B) altogether. Many NRIs don’t even know it exists. It’s not marketed as aggressively by banks, but for someone with significant savings in foreign currency, it’s genuinely the most protective option.
  4. Not submitting DTAA documents. If your country has a treaty with India and you’re getting taxed at 30% on your NRO interest without submitting a TRC, you’re possibly overpaying. Get that paperwork sorted.
  5. Opening accounts in the wrong name. NRE and FCNR(B) accounts can only have joint holders who are NRIs. An NRO account can have a resident Indian as a joint holder. Many people get this wrong when trying to add a parent or spouse as a joint holder.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I have all three accounts simultaneously?

Absolutely, yes! In fact, many NRIs do exactly that. Each account serves a distinct purpose, and holding all three lets you cover every financial base — foreign savings, Indian income, and currency-protected deposits.

Can I transfer money from NRO to NRE?

Yes, you can transfer up to USD 1 million per financial year from your NRO to your NRE account, subject to tax compliance and submission of Form 15CA/15CB signed off by a Chartered Accountant. It’s not instant, but it’s doable.

What happens to my FCNR NRE NRO accounts if I return to India permanently?

Once you return to India and your residential status changes back to “Resident,” you’ll need to re-designate your accounts. NRE and FCNR(B) accounts convert to resident rupee accounts or RFC (Resident Foreign Currency) accounts. NRO accounts simply become regular savings accounts.

Which account offers the best interest rates?

NRE fixed deposits tend to offer some of the highest interest rates in India — sometimes comparable to regular domestic FDs. FCNR(B) rates are tied to international benchmarks and are generally lower in absolute terms. NRO rates are similar to NRE rates, but the tax deduction eats into your effective yield. So if you’re purely chasing returns, NRE FDs often win — but always weigh the currency risk.

Is TDS deducted automatically on NRE accounts?

Nope! Since NRE accounts are tax-exempt, no TDS is deducted. On NRO accounts, TDS at 30% (plus surcharge and cess) is deducted automatically by the bank. You’ll need to claim refunds or credits separately if DTAA applies.

Can an NRI gift money to a resident Indian through these accounts?

Yes. Funds from NRE and FCNR(B) accounts can be gifted to a resident close relative, subject to LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) limits. NRO accounts can also be used for gifting within applicable RBI guidelines.

The Bottom Line on FCNR NRE NRO Accounts

Here’s the honest summary: there’s no single “best” account in the FCNR NRE NRO trio. Each one was built for a specific situation, and the smartest NRIs don’t choose between them — they use them strategically together.

If you’ve got Indian income rolling in, the NRO account isn’t optional — it’s essential. If you’re parking foreign earnings in India and want tax-free, fully repatriable savings, the NRE account is your workhorse. And if you’re sitting on a chunk of foreign currency and don’t want the rupee’s ups and downs keeping you up at night, the FCNR(B) account is genuinely one of the most underappreciated financial tools available to NRIs.

The key takeaway? Don’t let the jargon scare you off from making active decisions about your money. You’ve worked hard for it — whether in Sunnyvale or Singapore or Sheffield — and it deserves a smarter home than a neglected savings account that no longer fits your life.

Talk to a qualified NRI tax advisor, compare rates across a couple of banks, and get your accounts set up properly. Future-you, sitting comfortably with your finances sorted, will be very glad you did.

Conclusion

Navigating the world of FCNR NRE NRO accounts can feel overwhelming at first glance, but once you understand what each one actually does, it’s really just a matter of matching the account to your money’s origin and purpose. NRE for tax-free foreign earnings in rupees. NRO for Indian-sourced income. FCNR(B) for foreign currency savings that you’d rather not convert just yet.

Most NRIs will find they need more than one — and that’s perfectly fine. The Indian banking system has designed these accounts to work together, covering different corners of an NRI’s financial life. The real mistake is doing nothing and leaving your money in the wrong place — or worse, in a regular savings account that’s technically non-compliant.

So take the first step today. Review your income sources, weigh your repatriation needs, consider your tax situation, and open the account that actually suits your life abroad. Your savings deserve nothing less.

Why Credit Repair and Credit Building Are Different

Credit is often treated like a monolith, but there are different strategies for different goals. Improving your score and fixing your credit are not the same thing, and each involves unique steps to success and offers its own challenges.

Credit repair addresses the actual information in your credit file, using your rights to remove mistakes and mitigate negative items. Credit building involves using new credit to create a stronger history. Credit repair and credit building both improve trust with lenders and increase chances of approval, and virtually every consumer will engage in both at some point.

Not focusing on your credit goals can lead to confusion and frustration. A person may spend months trying to build credit when a reporting error is the real problem. Another may focus on disputing negative items while neglecting the habits necessary to build long-term credit strength. Understanding where credit repair ends, and credit building begins can help consumers make better decisions and set more realistic expectations.

Credit Repair Credit Building

What Is Credit Repair?

Credit repair focuses on correcting problems that already exist within a consumer’s credit profile.

Most commonly, this involves reviewing credit reports for inaccurate, incomplete, outdated, or unverifiable information and addressing those issues through the dispute process. The goal is not to create positive credit history. The goal is to ensure that the information being reported is accurate and compliant with applicable laws.

Examples of issues that may lead someone to pursue credit repair include:

  • Accounts that do not belong to them
  • Duplicate accounts
  • Incorrect balances
  • Reporting errors
  • Identity theft-related accounts
  • Outdated negative information
  • Collection accounts reported inaccurately

Credit repair is often associated with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), which gives consumers the right to dispute inaccurate information appearing on their credit reports.

A key misunderstanding is that credit repair is not about removing accurate negative information simply because it is undesirable. If a late payment was legitimately reported and remains within the reporting period, it may continue to appear even if the consumer wishes it would disappear.

The purpose of credit repair is accuracy.

What Is Credit Building?

Credit building is different because it focuses on creating and strengthening positive credit history. Instead of correcting existing problems, credit building is about demonstrating responsible borrowing behavior over time. Lenders and scoring models want evidence that a consumer can manage credit responsibly. Credit building activities help create that evidence.

Examples include:

  • Making on-time payments
  • Maintaining low credit card balances
  • Using credit consistently and responsibly
  • Diversifying credit types when appropriate
  • Avoiding unnecessary late payments
  • Keeping older accounts open when practical

Unlike credit repair, which can sometimes produce results within weeks or months, credit building is usually a longer-term process with very few shortcuts. For example, a consumer who opens a secured credit card today may need many months of responsible use before meaningful improvements begin appearing in their credit profile.

Why Credit Repair Alone Is Often Not Enough

Many consumers focus entirely on repairing past issues while overlooking the need to build future credit strength. Even if every legitimate dispute is resolved successfully, a credit profile still needs positive information.

Imagine someone who removes an inaccurate collection account but has no active credit cards, no installment loans, and very little recent activity. Their credit report may be cleaner than before, but lenders still have limited information available to evaluate risk.

This is why many consumers eventually discover that credit repair and credit building often work together. Removing inaccurate information can improve the foundation, but building positive history helps strengthen the structure sitting on top of it.

Don’t Start Building Without Reviewing Your Reports

The opposite problem occurs as well. Some consumers spend years trying to build credit while never reviewing the information being reported about them. An identity theft account, incorrect balance, or reporting error can quietly undermine progress for years if it goes unnoticed.

As consumer awareness grows, more people are learning their credit rights and the importance of regularly reviewing credit reports for accuracy rather than assuming all reported information is correct. Building positive habits remains important, but those habits are most effective when the underlying information is accurate.

The Most Effective Approach Usually Involves Both

For many consumers, the best strategy is not choosing between credit repair and credit building. It is understanding when each is appropriate. Credit repair addresses problems. Credit building creates opportunities. One focuses on correcting the past. The other focuses on strengthening the future.

A healthy credit profile often requires both elements. Consumers benefit from reviewing their reports regularly, disputing inaccurate information when necessary, and simultaneously developing the habits that contribute to long-term credit success.

Consumers who understand the difference are often better positioned to make informed decisions, set realistic expectations, and develop a more effective strategy for improving their overall credit health. Whether someone is recovering from past financial difficulties, correcting reporting issues, or simply starting their credit journey, recognizing the role of both credit repair and credit building can provide a clearer path toward long-term financial stability.

Mutual Fund Overlap & Portfolio Diversification

You have invested in five different mutual funds. You feel confident that your money is well spread out and that you are not putting all your eggs in one basket. But what if I told you that all five of those funds might actually be holding many of the same companies? That is the problem of mutual fund portfolio overlap — and it is far more common than most investors realise.

Mutual Fund Overlap

What Is Mutual Fund Overlap?

When you invest in more than one mutual fund, each fund holds a collection of stocks or bonds. Portfolio overlap happens when two or more of your funds are holding the same stocks or securities.

Think of it this way. Imagine you buy apples from two different shops, believing you are getting variety. But when you get home, both bags are full of the same type of apple — Red Delicious from the same farm. You paid for two bags thinking you had variety, but you really just bought the same thing twice.

That is exactly what mutual fund overlap feels like. Your portfolio might look diversified on the surface — you have a large-cap fund, a flexi-cap fund, and a blue-chip fund — but all three might have Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, Infosys, and TCS among their top holdings. In that case, you are not as diversified as you think. This is often called false diversification.

This is not just a minor inconvenience. It is a real problem that can silently affect your returns and expose you to more risk than you signed up for.

A Real-World Example to Make It Clear

Let’s say you invest in three different equity mutual funds:

  • Fund A: A large-cap fund
  • Fund B: A Nifty 50 index fund
  • Fund C: A flexi-cap fund

Now, the Nifty 50 index fund by definition holds all 50 companies in the Nifty 50 index. Large-cap funds are also required by SEBI (the market regulator) to invest at least 80% of their money in the top 100 companies by market cap. Flexi-cap funds have the freedom to invest anywhere, but most fund managers tend to lean heavily on the same large, reliable companies.

The result? There is a good chance that all three funds have significant overlap in the top 10 holdings. You might think you are diversified across three funds, but a large portion of your money is essentially riding on the same handful of large-cap stocks.

Why Does Portfolio Overlap Happen?

Understanding why this happens can help you avoid it going forward. Here are the most common reasons:

  1. Investing in multiple funds of the same category

If you invest in two large-cap funds, or two mid-cap funds, they are almost certain to have similar holdings. SEBI’s categorisation rules mean that funds in the same category must invest in similar types of stocks. Two large-cap funds will both have to pick from the same pool of companies.

  1. Chasing well-performing, popular companies

Fund managers across different funds all tend to favour the same tried-and-tested companies — the blue-chip giants that have a strong track record. This means that even funds from different categories can end up holding the same high-quality stocks like HDFC Bank, Infosys, or Asian Paints.

  1. Sector-focused investing

If you invest in a technology sector fund and a growth-oriented equity fund, both may end up holding the same major IT companies, leading to overlap within that sector.

  1. Combining index funds with active funds

An index fund that tracks Nifty 50 and an actively managed large-cap fund are likely to have many of the same stocks, since the active fund manager also benchmarks against the same index.

  1. Not researching before investing

Many investors choose funds based on ratings, past performance, or a friend’s recommendation — without actually looking at what the fund holds. This is one of the most common causes of unintentional overlap.

Why Does Overlap Matter?  

Portfolio overlap might seem harmless on paper, but it has a few serious consequences that every investor should understand.

  1. You Are Not Actually Diversified

The biggest benefit of owning multiple mutual funds is supposed to be diversification — spreading your risk so that a fall in one stock or sector doesn’t drag down your whole portfolio. But if your funds are all holding the same stocks, a crash in those stocks will hit all your funds at the same time. You have paid for diversification but have not actually achieved it.

  1. Losses Get Multiplied

When an overlapping stock falls — let’s say HDFC Bank drops by 15% — and that stock is present in three of your funds, the negative impact on your portfolio is effectively tripled. Instead of the loss being contained to one fund, it spreads across multiple funds simultaneously.

  1. You Are Paying More Fees for No Extra Benefit

Every mutual fund charges a fee, called the expense ratio, to manage your money. If two funds are essentially holding the same stocks, you are paying two sets of management fees for what is essentially the same portfolio. Over time, these extra costs chip away at your returns.

  1. You Miss Out on Better Opportunities

The money parked in overlapping funds could have been deployed in genuinely different asset classes, sectors, or geographies. By concentrating too much in overlapping funds, you miss out on the growth that other parts of the market might offer.

  1. Your Risk Assessment Becomes Inaccurate

When you review your portfolio, you might think your concentration in any one stock is small. But if that stock appears across four different funds, your actual exposure to it is much higher than you realise. This makes it very hard to truly understand the risk level of your portfolio.

How to Detect Mutual Fund Overlap

The good news is that portfolio overlap is completely detectable — you just need to know where to look and what to check.

Method 1: Use the Simple Overlap Formula

There is a straightforward way to calculate the overlap between two funds:

Overlap % = (Number of stocks common to both funds) ÷ (Total unique stocks across both funds) × 100

For example, if Fund A holds 40 stocks and Fund B holds 45 stocks, and 20 of those stocks appear in both funds, then:

  • Total unique stocks = 40 + 45 – 20 = 65
  • Overlap = 20 ÷ 65 × 100 = 30.8%

A higher overlap percentage means less real diversification. As a rough guide:

  • Below 15%: Healthy — your funds are genuinely diversified
  • 15%–30%: Moderate — monitor this and see if it can be improved
  • Above 30%: High — you likely have a false diversification problem worth addressing

Method 2: Manually Compare Fund Factsheets

Every mutual fund in India is required to publish its complete portfolio holdings every month. You can find these factsheets on the fund house’s website or on platforms like Valueresearchonline, Morningstar India, or Moneycontrol. Download the holdings of each fund in your portfolio and look for stocks that appear in more than one fund.

Pay special attention to the top 10–15 holdings of each fund, since these make up the bulk of a fund’s portfolio and have the most impact on performance.

Method 3: Check Fund Categories

Before investing, or when reviewing your portfolio, simply look at what category each fund falls into. If two or more funds belong to the same category (e.g., two large-cap funds or two flexi-cap funds), there is a strong chance of overlap. SEBI’s fund categorisation system makes this easy to check.

Method 4: Look for Similar Performance Patterns

If you notice that two funds in your portfolio always seem to rise and fall together — performing almost identically in all market conditions — that is a strong signal that they hold similar stocks. True diversification should mean that different funds in your portfolio respond differently to market events.

Method 5: Use Online Overlap Checking Tools

Several free online tools now let you compare mutual fund portfolios for overlap. Websites like Valueresearchonline, Kuvera, and Groww offer features where you enter the names of your funds and instantly see the percentage of overlapping holdings. These tools save a lot of time and are very easy to use.

Method 6: Do a Full Portfolio Review

If you want the most thorough picture, compile the complete holdings of all your funds into one spreadsheet and highlight any stock that appears in more than one fund. Count how many funds each stock appears in and what percentage of your total invested amount is exposed to that single company. This gives you a very clear picture of your true concentration.

Method 7: Consult a Financial Advisor

If you find this process confusing or time-consuming, a SEBI-registered investment advisor can do this analysis for you. They use professional tools and bring experience to the table, so they can not only detect overlap but also suggest a restructured portfolio tailored to your specific financial goals.

How Much Overlap Is Acceptable?

There is no universally agreed-upon “safe” number, but here is a practical guideline. If two funds share more than 40–50% of their holdings, you are essentially duplicating your investment. In most cases, keeping the overlap between any two funds below 25–30% is a reasonable target for retail investors.

It is also worth noting that some degree of overlap is almost unavoidable if you invest in Indian equity funds, because the Indian market has a limited number of high-quality, highly liquid companies. The same names will appear across categories. The goal is not zero overlap, but manageable overlap.

How to Avoid or Fix Mutual Fund Overlap

Now that you know how to detect overlap, let’s talk about what you can actually do about it.

  1. Invest Across Different Categories

The single most effective way to avoid overlap is to make sure your funds belong to genuinely different categories. Instead of having two large-cap funds, consider having one large-cap fund, one mid-cap fund, and one small-cap or sector fund. Or combine equity funds with a debt fund or international equity fund. The more distinct the categories, the lower the natural overlap.

  1. Check Top Holdings Before You Invest

Before adding any new fund to your portfolio, take five minutes to look at its top 10 holdings. Compare them with the funds you already own. If you see a lot of familiar names, that is a red flag. Move on to a fund whose top holdings look different from what you already have.

  1. Choose Funds with Different Investment Styles

Fund managers have different styles — some are “growth” investors (buying companies with high growth potential), while others are “value” investors (buying companies that appear undervalued). Mixing these styles naturally reduces overlap, because growth and value fund managers often don’t buy the same stocks.

Similarly, combining an actively managed fund with a passively managed index fund can work well if the index fund tracks a different index — for example, combining a Nifty 50 index fund with a Nifty Next 50 index fund gives you exposure to the top 100 companies with very little overlap, since the two indexes track different sets of companies.

  1. Consider Different Benchmarks

Funds that follow different benchmarks are less likely to overlap. A fund benchmarked against the Nifty 50 and a fund benchmarked against the BSE Mid-Cap Index will naturally have very few stocks in common, simply because they are drawing from different universes of companies.

  1. Limit the Total Number of Funds

More funds does not mean more diversification. In fact, beyond a certain point, adding more funds actually increases the chances of overlap. Most financial experts agree that a well-structured portfolio of 4–6 funds is enough for most retail investors to achieve meaningful diversification across market caps, sectors, and asset classes. Beyond that, you are likely just adding complexity and cost without adding real diversification.

  1. Add Variety Across Asset Classes

Instead of adding a sixth or seventh equity fund, consider adding a debt fund, a gold fund, or an international fund to your portfolio. These have near-zero overlap with your equity holdings and genuinely diversify the risk in your portfolio.

  1. Rebalance Regularly

Markets change, and so do fund portfolios. A fund that had very little overlap with your other funds a year ago might have shifted its holdings since then. Make it a habit to review your portfolio at least once every six months. Check for any new areas of overlap that may have developed and rebalance if necessary.

 Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is some overlap normal?

Yes, especially in the Indian market. Because there are a limited number of high-quality, highly liquid stocks, some overlap across equity funds is almost unavoidable. The goal is to keep it at a manageable level — typically below 25–30% between any two funds.

Q: How often should I check for overlap?

At least twice a year, or whenever you are thinking of adding a new fund to your portfolio. Fund holdings can change as fund managers adjust their positions.

Q: If I have overlap, should I immediately sell one fund?

Not necessarily. Consider the tax implications of selling (especially if your investment has grown and you would have to pay capital gains tax), the exit load if you are selling within a certain period, and the overall quality of the fund. Sometimes it makes more sense to stop putting new money into the overlapping fund and let your newer contributions build a better-structured portfolio going forward.

Q: Does overlap affect debt funds too?

Yes, but it is less common and less impactful in debt funds, since there are many more bonds available and the overlap in bond holdings is typically smaller. That said, if you have two liquid funds or two short-duration funds, it is worth checking.

Conclusion

Portfolio overlap is one of the most overlooked problems in mutual fund investing. It quietly undermines the diversification you thought you had, exposes you to higher risk, and costs you money in fees — all without you realising it.

The fix is not complicated. It starts with awareness. Take an afternoon to look at the actual holdings of each fund in your portfolio. Compare them. Use the free tools available online. If you find significant overlap, make a plan to gradually restructure your portfolio into genuinely diversified funds that cover different categories, asset classes, and investment styles.

Remember: true diversification is about owning assets that behave differently from each other. When markets fall, you want some of your investments to be less affected. That cushion only works if your funds are genuinely holding different things.

Investing in multiple funds is a smart strategy — but only when those funds are truly different from each other. Make sure yours are.