Debt mutual funds may seem simple on the surface, but to make informed decisions, investors must understand a few core concepts — especially duration and risk.
In this article, we go deeper into debt funds, explore important jargons, and break down some popular debt fund categories using simple examples.
1. What Is Macaulay Duration?
Imagine you invest ₹10 lakh in a 2-year bond, which pays interest (coupon) every three months and returns your principal at maturity.
Even though the bond matures in 2 years, the actual time you take to recover your investment (through coupons + principal) is less than 2 years.
Suppose this time works out to 1.8 years.
This number — 1.8 years — is called the Macaulay Duration of the bond.
Why is Duration important?
Because it tells you:
- How quickly you get back your invested money
- How sensitive the bond (or debt fund) is to interest rate changes
Higher duration = higher sensitivity.
2. What Is Modified Duration?
Modified Duration shows how much a bond’s price will move if interest rates change.
Example:
If a bond has Modified Duration = 3.2, then:
- A 1% rise in interest rates → 3.2% fall in bond price
- A 1% fall in interest rates → 3.2% rise in bond price
This is why long-duration funds fluctuate much more than short-duration funds.
Key insight:
Higher duration = higher volatility due to interest rate changes.
3. Why Do These Jargons Matter?
Because SEBI’s definitions for debt funds use duration as the core criterion.
Every debt mutual fund category is designed around duration and/or credit quality.
Let’s explore a few important ones.
4. Ultra Short Duration Funds
According to SEBI:
Ultra Short Duration Funds must have a portfolio Macaulay duration between 3–6 months.
This is an aggregate portfolio requirement, not a per-bond requirement.
That means the fund can hold:
- Commercial papers
- Treasury repos (T-Reps)
- Short-term bonds
- NCDs
- Overnight instruments
…as long as the overall duration stays within the 3–6 month range.
When should you invest?
Ideal for investors who want to park money for 1–2 years.
Expected returns:
Usually close to bank FD rates, slightly higher in some cases.
If your horizon is less than 1 year?
Choose:
- Overnight Fund, or
- Liquid Fund
5. Credit Risk Funds — High Risk, High Reward (and Often Not Worth It)
SEBI defines a Credit Risk Fund as:
A fund that invests at least 65% of its assets in AA rated or lower corporate bonds.
What does this mean?
- These funds lend to companies with questionable creditworthiness.
- Higher credit risk = higher interest rate offered.
- But also a higher probability of:
- Default,
- Delayed payments,
- Credit downgrade, causing NAV to crash.
A AA-rated bond slipping to BB can cause a sharp fall in NAV.
Why do fund managers take such risk?
Because companies in need of funds promise high interest.
If the company survives and improves its rating, bond prices rise → NAV rises.
But the risk is extremely high.
Who should avoid Credit Risk Funds?
✔ Anyone investing for safety
✔ Investors parking emergency funds
✔ Investors wanting stable returns
✔ Beginners
Expert insight:
You are better off chasing returns in equity funds, not in high-risk debt funds.
Debt funds should primarily be used for capital preservation, not aggressive returns.
6. When Should You Use Debt Funds?
Debt funds are ideal for:
- Parking surplus cash
- Short-to-medium-term goals
- Protecting capital
- Stability in your portfolio
They are not meant for:
- High return expectations
- Speculation
- Quick gains
Key Takeaways
- Macaulay Duration = time to recover your investment.
- Modified Duration = sensitivity of bond price to interest rate changes.
- Ultra Short Duration Funds are good for 1–2 year goals.
- Credit Risk Funds are extremely risky and best avoided for most investors.
- Use debt funds primarily to protect capital, not to chase returns.