What are Debt Mutual Funds?
From FundsIndia.com
Income funds, dynamic bond funds,
ultra short funds, yields, credit downgrades…for a newbie investor (and for
many seasoned ones, too!) the world of debt mutual funds can be a confusing
place.
Explaining everything there is to know
about debt mutual funds makes for a very long article, so we will take it in
stages.
We’ will look at the types of debt
mutual funds that there are.
What they are?
Companies borrow for various purposes – to meet working capital requirements, to fund expansion, for capital expenditure, and so on.
Companies borrow for various purposes – to meet working capital requirements, to fund expansion, for capital expenditure, and so on.
Similarly, the government also borrows for its
own spending needs. These entities issue instruments for these borrowings –
bonds, debentures, treasury bills, commercial papers, certificates of deposits,
and such.
These debt instruments carry a specific
interest rate and maturity period (tenure). They are also called fixed income
instruments. Maturities can range from a few days to a few months to a few
years.
In the case of
government securities, it can go up to several years. Generally, short-term
instruments are less risky than long-term ones for the simple reason that the
uncertainties linked to a company’s fundamentals are higher over the long term.
Debt investments carry 2 types of
risk.The first is that interest rates change over time. If interest rates move
lower, new debt instruments issued will consequently have lower interest rates.
But, then the older instruments that
are already issued still carry the old interest rate (called coupon).
They however, adjust to the new
interest rate scenario by way of change in their price.
Thus, the bond prices traded in the
market move in line with change in interest rates. This relationship is
captured by what is called the ‘yield’ of the bond. We will discuss more about
it in another article.
The second risk is that the borrower
fails to meet payments. Companies are graded on their credit-worthiness or /
their ability to meet interest and principal repayment obligations on time.
This grade is termed its credit
rating. A high credit company is safer than a low-quality one, and will,
consequently, pay a lower interest rate. While risk is higher in poor-quality
company, rates are also higher as it is forced to pay a higher price in order
to borrow.
Debt mutual fund
types
Debt mutual funds
invest in a combination of debt securities
short or / long term, corporate bonds, bank debt, gilts, high-quality
papers, low quality papers, secured and unsecured bonds, and so on.
There are, at all
times, several instruments to invest in with varying interest rates and
maturities. Debt funds actively juggle these instruments in their portfolio
based on the interest rate movement to deliver returns. The type of debt fund
it is depends on the average maturity of the instruments in its portfolio or
then the kind of strategy it follows.
The longer the
maturity period is, the higher the risk, and thus higher the return.
Liquid funds hold instruments of
extremely short maturities.
By rule, they can not
invest in instruments whose maturities are more than 91 days.
Typically, liquid
funds hold instruments that mature in a matter of days. These can be commercial
papers issued by companies (CP), certificate of deposits issued by banks (CD)
or government treasury bills.
These are
collectively called money market instruments. Liquid funds also stick to
instruments of the highest credit quality.
The short nature of these instruments,
the high quality, and the lack of volatility in their NAV make them very safe
investments. They have no exit loads and you can redeem investments very easily
in these funds. For these reasons, liquid funds are the perfect alternative to
savings bank accounts, which carry the lowest interest rates. Money left idling
in your savings bank account, therefore, can be shifted into liquid funds to
get higher returns.
Ultra short-term funds are a step above
liquid funds in terms of the maturity of the instruments they hold. That is,
while they hold CDs and CPs, they go for corporate or bank bonds that are a bit
longer term in nature of up to one year, or /
maybe a little longer. Therefore, they require a holding period of
around a year.
Currently, the
average maturity period of ultra short-term funds is around 9 months. Most
ultra-short term funds invest in high-quality credit. They are good parking
grounds for surplus money that you don’t need immediately but may require a
little later on. They deliver higher returns than liquid funds.
Short-term debt funds go for longer
maturity periods than – yes, you guessed it –ultra-short term funds. They
invest in corporate bonds to a greater degree, and rely far less on CD and CPs.
They may also have
some holding in short-term government securities. The average maturity periods
of the portfolios will typically be around 2 years or a maximum of 3 years.
They require a holding period of around 2 years.
Long-term debt funds
(you’re
now a pro!) invest in much longer-term debt of 3 years and more. These funds
require holding periods of at least three years and should form a part of every
long-term investment portfolio. Think of both short-term and long-term debt
funds as an alternative to your normal go-to option of fixed deposits.
Short-term and long-term debt funds
may take a call to invest in instruments of low credit quality companies. Because
such instruments carry attractive interest rates, the portfolio’s yield moves
higher and returns jump, though the risk also moves a couple of notches higher.
Mutual funds that explicitly (by
mandate) follow such a strategy of identifying companies with poor credit and
high interest rates and lending to them are called credit opportunity funds and
are among the highest-risk debt funds.
Some short-term and
long-term debt funds are also called income funds due to their
strategy.
These funds hold
bonds to maturity and primarily aim at earning interest income (or in
finance-speak, an accrual strategy) across rate cycles.
They do not try to
predict or play the interest rate cycle. Such funds primarily hold corporate
bonds as that’s where rates are higher and fluctuations in bond prices lower.
Gilt funds are funds that invest
entirely only in government securities (or gilts, for short) and try to benefit
from changes in bond prices as interest rates change. There can be both
short-term and long-term gilt funds.
These funds are akin
to sector funds in equities – they require careful watching and timed entries
and exits and are thus the highest-risk category of debt funds.
All the above are
open-ended debt funds. This apart, you have close-ended debt funds called Fixed Maturity Plans
(FMPs),
which have a fixed tenure. Your investment is locked for this period. Tenure
can be a few months to a few years.
They invest in money
market instruments, bonds, and gilts. FMPs usually match the maturity profile
of the portfolio to their mandated maturity period.
To recap, the risk and return levels
from lowest to highest are in order of explanation above – liquid, ultra-short,
short, long, gilt.
You are now well-versed in the
categories of debt funds! Next week, we’ll look at how returns are generated
for debt funds and why the risk levels are as mentioned.
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