With debt being the flavour of the season, this week has
seen launch of two debt mutual fund schemes. Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund is
offering a short-term fixed maturity plan (FMP), while L&T Mutual Fund has
launched a short-term debt fund.
L&T’s short-term debt fund is a three-year fund,
benchmarked against Crisil’s short-term bond fund index. Birla’s fixed term
plan, Series DV, is a close-ended income scheme, for a duration of 546 days or
a year and a half.
Joseph Thomas, head- investment advisory and financial
planning, Aditya Birla Money, says, “With inflationary expectations getting
moderate and the resistance that short-term interest rates are facing,
investing into short-term funds offer an appropriate risk-return trade off for
investors.”
He advises, investors to go into schemes with a maturity
profile of above six months to two years.
Though everyone agrees we may have reached the sharp end of
the interest rate curve, it may still be some time before a reversal in trend.
Which is why, depending on the investor’s liquidity needs and his view on
interest rates, one could opt for either an FMP or a short-term debt fund.
According to Bekxy Kuriakose, senior fund manager, L&T
Mutual Fund, “Investors who are fairly confident of rates having peaked out and
have no urgent need of liquidity can lock in their money into short-term FMPs.”
FMPs invest in debt securities, that mature just before the
scheme’s maturity. FMPs with over a year duration are popular because of the
possible double indexation benefits.
For instance, if an investment is made in December 2011, one
can claim indexation benefits for both financial years 2011-12 and 2012-13, as
the product will mature in 2012.
With inflation at around nine per cent, a double indexation
benefit (of 18 per cent) would make the investment tax-free. Those in the
highest tax bracket will benefit the most.
On the other hand, those willing to take the interest rate
risk but wanting to minimise their capital losses, can invest a small part of
their portfolio into short-term debt funds.
“Unlike a gilt fund or a long-term bond fund, short-term
funds should be giving positive returns and one can look at investing, say,
between 20-30 per cent of their portfol-io into them,” says Dhurva Chatterji,
senior research analyst, Morning Star.
In the event of interest rates beginning to reverse, short
term debt funds will benefit and not FMPs. This is because with an FMP you are
locked in with both the tenure and the interest rate, unlike a debt fund which
is open-ended.
L&T’s scheme is an open ended scheme that gives the
investor the freedom to exit when he wants.
In the last one year, short-term FMPS have given returns of
8.82 per cent and short-term debt funds 8.69 per cent.
Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/investments-dependliquidity-needsinterest-rate-outlook/457869/
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