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Garima Samriddhi Yojana NAV Today: Latest Daily Data
Garima Samriddhi Yojana (GSY) is a closed-end mutual fund scheme in Nepal managed by Garima Capital. Its latest net asset value (NAV) stands at Rs 10.17 per unit. On the NEPSE secondary market the unit last traded at Rs 9.78, a discount of 3.83% to its NAV. The scheme carries an expected distributable dividend of 4.90%. Here is everything the numbers say about it today.
Key facts at a glance
| Symbol | GSY |
|---|---|
| Fund house | Garima Capital |
| Structure | Closed-End |
| Net asset value (NAV) | Rs 10.17 |
| Market price (LTP) | Rs 9.78 |
| Premium / discount to NAV | -3.83% |
| Expected distributable dividend | 4.90% |
| Fund size (paid-up) | Rs 1.25 arba (Rs 125.0 crore) |
| Stock holdings | 78 |
| Time to maturity | in 8 years |
What is GSY?
Garima Samriddhi Yojana is one of the 58 mutual fund schemes tracked across Nepal's capital market, and one of several managed by Garima Capital. As a closed-end fund it raised a fixed pool of money at issue, listed its units on the Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE), and trades there like a share - so its market price can sit above or below the underlying NAV. The scheme has about in 8 years left before it matures. The fund was seeded with a paid-up size of Rs 1.25 arba (Rs 125.0 crore).
GSY NAV and market price today
The most recent NAV for GSY is Rs 10.17 per unit. NAV is the per-unit book value of the fund - the total value of everything it owns, minus what it owes, divided by units outstanding - and each AMC publishes it in its monthly report. On NEPSE, GSY last changed hands at Rs 9.78. The gap between price and NAV is what investors call the premium or discount.
Premium or discount to NAV
GSY trades at a discount of 3.83% to NAV. A discount means you can buy a rupee of assets for less than a rupee; a premium means the opposite. It is calculated as (market price - NAV) / NAV x 100. The market-wide average across closed-end schemes is currently -4.65%, so GSY is trading richer than the average scheme.
Dividends and expected yield
The scheme has an expected distributable dividend of about 4.90%. Distributable dividend is the share of realised gains and income a scheme can legally pay out to unit-holders. The average expected yield across schemes that disclose one is about 7.92%, placing GSY below the pack.
Portfolio allocation and holdings
By the latest disclosure the fund holds roughly 94.1% in listed equity (the capital market); 2.5% in fixed income; 2.4% in cash and equivalents spread across 78 individual stock holdings. The equity slice is what drives most of the return - and most of the risk - so the split between shares, debt and cash tells you how aggressive the scheme is.
How to buy GSY
- Open a demat account and register on MeroShare through any depository participant (DP) or broker.
- Fund your broker trading account and note the scheme's NEPSE symbol, GSY.
- Place a buy order through your broker's TMS (Trade Management System) at the price you are willing to pay.
- Once matched, the units settle into your demat account like any listed share.
Because it is listed, you can buy or sell any trading day - you are not locked in until maturity, though selling before maturity means accepting the going market price.
Is GSY a good buy right now?
GSY is trading at a discount, which value-minded investors watch for - you pay less than the disclosed asset value. None of this is a recommendation - use the figures to inform your own decision, and always confirm the latest disclosure.
Where this sits in Nepal's fund market
Nepal's mutual fund industry has grown to 58 schemes run by 19 licensed fund houses, split between 44 closed-end funds that trade on NEPSE and 14 open-end funds bought and sold at NAV. For ordinary savers, a mutual fund is the simplest way into the share market: a professional manager pools money from thousands of investors and spreads it across dozens of listed companies, so you get diversification and expertise without picking stocks yourself. Across the closed-end schemes the average unit currently trades at -4.65% to NAV, and 29 of them sit at a discount - a reminder that even inside one asset class the numbers vary widely, which is exactly why comparing the underlying data matters.
The key terms, explained
If you are new to Nepali mutual funds, these are the words that do most of the work in this article:
- NAV (net asset value): the per-unit book value of a fund - the total worth of everything it owns minus what it owes, divided by units outstanding. Each fund house publishes it in a monthly report.
- LTP (last traded price): the price a listed, closed-end scheme last changed hands at on the Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE).
- Premium / discount to NAV: the gap between market price and NAV. Trading below NAV is a discount (you buy assets for less than book value); trading above is a premium.
- Distributable dividend: the share of realised gains and income a scheme is legally allowed to pay out to unit-holders.
- Closed-end vs open-end: a closed-end fund raises a fixed pool, lists on NEPSE and matures on a set date; an open-end fund issues and redeems units on demand at NAV, with no maturity.
- AUM / paid-up size: how much money the scheme manages - a rough gauge of its scale and liquidity, quoted in crore and arba (1 arba = 100 crore = Rs 1 billion).
Risks worth keeping in mind
Mutual funds are diversified, but they are not risk-free. A few things to weigh before you invest:
- Market risk: most Nepali schemes are equity-heavy, so their NAV rises and falls with NEPSE. A weak market drags the whole fund down.
- Concentration: funds from the same house often hold many of the same stocks, so owning several may diversify you less than it appears.
- Liquidity and the discount: a closed-end unit is only worth what a buyer will pay on NEPSE that day; thin trading can widen the discount when you want to sell.
- Maturity: at maturity the scheme winds up and pays out at NAV, so the discount typically narrows as that date nears - timing matters.
- Data lag: NAV is disclosed periodically, so the figure you see may trail the fund's real-time value between reports.
How to start investing in Nepali mutual funds
Getting started is more straightforward than most first-time investors expect. The practical path looks like this:
- Open a demat account and BOID through any depository participant (a bank or broker), then register on MeroShare - this is your gateway to holding and applying for securities online.
- Link a bank account for ASBA/C-ASBA so you can apply for new fund offerings and debenture issues directly from your bank.
- Decide your style: buy a listed closed-end scheme any trading day on NEPSE through your broker's TMS, apply for an open-end scheme at NAV, or subscribe to a systematic plan (SIP) that invests a fixed amount every month.
- Mind the costs and tax: factor in brokerage, and remember that dividends and capital gains are taxable in Nepal - check the current rates before you invest.
A mutual fund suits investors who want exposure to the share market without the time or expertise to pick individual stocks. Start with an amount you can leave invested, compare a handful of schemes on the numbers, and review your holdings each time the AMCs publish fresh monthly reports.
The bottom line
For Garima Samriddhi Yojana, the numbers that matter today are its NAV of Rs 10.17, a discount of 3.83% to NAV, and an expected dividend of 4.90%. Track how it moves against every other Nepali scheme on Nepal's Capitals.
Want the latest figures, side by side for every scheme? Open the live dashboard on Nepal's Capitals - refreshed each trading day, straight from the source.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the NAV of GSY today?
The latest published NAV is Rs 10.17 per unit, updated from Garima Capital's monthly report.
Is GSY open-end or closed-end?
GSY is a closed-end scheme, so it trades on NEPSE and can carry a premium or discount to NAV.
Who manages GSY?
The scheme is managed by Garima Capital, a SEBON-licensed fund house.
Does GSY pay a dividend?
Its expected distributable dividend is about 4.90%. Actual payouts are declared by the AMC.
How do I buy GSY?
Buy it on NEPSE through your broker's TMS with a demat and MeroShare account.
Disclaimer. This article is informational and is not investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Every figure is sourced from primary AMC disclosures and SEBON filings and is recomputed each trading day. Confirm the latest numbers before acting.
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